Good article!
Do you have the data on the performance difference with the aero and without?
Thank you
[This article discusses our 2012 Ford Mustang GT built to compete in SCCA CAM-C. We have since moved on from the project, but this information is still very relevant.]
So you’ve got the biggest possible tires, a ton of horsepower and a fully tuned suspension. What’s next to make your car faster? Likely it’s time for some aero modifications–assuming, of course, that your racing regs don’t prohibit them.
“Aero mods,” you say, “doesn’t that require lots of development and expense while not helping much at low speeds, anyway?” Luckily there is a type of aero device that is simple, inexpensive and effective. That would be a rear spoiler. Something not much more elaborate than a piece of flat sheet material can add measurable downforce to your car.
A spoiler is basically a flat-ish panel placed at the back of the car in order to provide downforce. These rear spoilers can be massive or tiny. They can be tuned for high speeds or low ones. The shape and angle can be adjusted to tune the tradeoff between drag and downforce. They can help balance chassis setup.
The basic operation of a spoiler can be explained in three basic steps:
Step 1:
The first step to understanding spoiler operation is a quick primer on flow direction. The spoiler is ultimately just a flap of bodywork located on the back of an aero device-and in this case, we’re referring to your entire car as an aero device. The spoiler’s job is simple: change the airflow around that device.
The spoiler’s job is to elevate the low speed/low energy area usually found behind the car. Elevating that area creates downforce upon the car itself.
Unfortunately, there is a tradeoff: a drag penalty as it takes work to redirect the airflow. However, swirl around the ends of the spoiler can also help the flow under the car and generally works to push the wake higher.
Step 2:
The second step is understanding the changes in the air pressures surrounding the spoiler. The pressure behind the spoiler will not change much since it is already in the wake of the car. The pressure ahead of the spoiler, however, will increase significantly.
Adding a spoiler to the back of the car results in a pressure increase that’s located further forward than the height of the spoiler itself. That means that the downforce is a function of the increased pressure over a much larger area than just the spoiler. The pressure change will increase with speed, making the spoiler more effective at higher speeds.
The pressure can be measured with a simple differential pressure gauge with a low enough range-like a magnehelic gauge. These gauges can be used to record pressures at different locations. If you have a data system with a spare manifold pressure sensor, you can easily record these readings.
The pressures that we are talking about are relatively small. The range is typically a few inches of water: 1 psi is equal to 27.7 inches of water, or 1 inch of water equals 0.036 psi. Using that conversion and approximating the area affected by the spoiler (in square inches) times the increase in pressure (in psi) gives you the local downforce increase.
To figure out the drag increase, you need to take the area of the spoiler itself and multiply it by the pressure differences from the front of the car to the back. (This will give a decent approximation, but is not the exact spoiler drag.) A typical car has 10–15 pounds of drag at 60 mph, so you can figure out how much you increased drag in exchange for the extra downforce.
Step 3:
The third step is understanding the geometry of the spoiler. It is basically a flat panel, but its performance is controlled by three factors.
In addition to those basics, here are a few more tips that can help you easily build an effective spoiler at home:
“The pressure behind the spoiler will not change much since it is already in the wake of the car. The pressure ahead of the spoiler, however, will increase significantly.”
Before installing the splitter, we saw turbulence right here. Additionally, air exiting the bottom of the engine compartment interrupted airflow beneath the car.
Putting our new knowledge into action, we added our aero tweaks.
Before
Air pressures above the hood were higher than atmospheric at the leadingedge, dropping to neutral toward the middle, then rising again at the base of the windshield.
The Mustang’s airfoil shape greatly reduces drag. However, that shape also increases the speed of the air passing above the car, creating some lower-than-atmospheric pressure areas toward the tail.
Pressures at the trailing edge of the trunk were near atmospheric, but the air coming off the tail was turbulent.
After
After installing the splitter, the air passing beneath the car encountered less resistance while also creating downforce.
Since the splitter initially trapped air inside the engine compartment, we installed a pair of hood vents. Installing these openings in a low-pressure area ensured that the hot air would escape.
The rear spoiler deflects air upward, slowing the airflow above the car while also creating downward leverage. As a result, we replaced a low-pressure area with a pocket of higher-than-atmospheric pressure.
The rear spoiler also calmed the turbulence originally seen at the tail, somewhat reducing unnecessary drag.
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Good article!
Do you have the data on the performance difference with the aero and without?
Thank you
The top illustration showing airflow over a spoiler is so wrong it's laughable. That is not what rear a spoiler does to airflow at all. The down force generated is due to the high pressure area created forward of the spoiler, not by air hitting the spoiler and turning up.
67LS1 said:Does wrong expire?
If you dig deeper in the archives you can probably find someone else that's an idiot. I know it makes me feel better about myself as well.
2013 was an especially bad year for morons.
In reply to 67LS1 :
For a two dimensional rendering of a four dimensional process, it isn't that bad
67LS1 said:The top illustration showing airflow over a spoiler is so wrong it's laughable. That is not what rear a spoiler does to airflow at all. The down force generated is due to the high pressure area created forward of the spoiler, not by air hitting the spoiler and turning up.
It's more complicated than just the pressure differential between the top side of the trunk and the underbody. And the high pressure area is able to form thanks to the turning provided by the spoiler.
So, really, it's both. Not one, or the other...
but, then again, as already pointed out: the articles actually explains it that way.
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