Yo, every now and then I remember your videos during the day while thinking about my car. I love the logic and research behind it! Keep 'em up, great content
Maybe I missed it but the actual location of the various vents you mention is crucial and that is dictated by where the low pressure areas are. There is plenty of info around as to how to find the location of such low pressure areas. Of course the vent design is relevant to flow as well.
So I was thinking... Could an inlet over the radiator convince some of that turbulent flow up and back inside the engine bay? Sure it might increase the pressure inside a bit but knowing air likes to stick to itself I'd guess that could do some convincing for the noodles.
I did some tastle tests on my mk1 years ago. About 8in from the hood edge as close to the fender as possible and a maximum of 8in long vents has worked well for my cars.
Thank you for including side ducting! I've been searching everywhere for research on them. On the topic of super touring cars, would you be able to do a video on the super touring wing profile, with its short chord length and massive gurney? Dimensioned cross sectional drawings of all the wings used can be found in the FIA database of ST cars. I would love to see the cfd results of that wing style on sedan/hatchback!!
Oh my god, dude. Literally the Video I need, right when I habe my morning coffee. I‘m restoring a 968 atm, and the race version had a vented hood, and also the engine bay gets hot as hell. Thanks for that one!
As always I love your videos and the way you iterate adding more and more to the same model each time. It's a really wonderful way for someone like myself to learn a little bit more abouty aerdynamics as it pertains to vehicles and racing.
Interesting. Very surprising results without ducted flow to the vent. I imagined a vent in the low pressure zone near the leading edge of the hood would be a hungry little vacuum cleaner pulling huge volumes of air out. The WRC engineers have been ducting to their vents for decades. Now we see why.
That’s very interesting how the front impacts the back. On my Mk1, I have the vent just on the edge of the low pressure zone on the hood and I have it raised with a gurney in front. This significantly increases extraction, and actually lowered drag a bit. I want to try like Audi did in DTM and venting a lot of the coolers into the low pressure areas in the wheel wells. What are your thoughts on aero balance for these FWD cars? I’ve been targeting about 60/40 downforce for the 65/35 weight distribution. The hope being that it understeers at high speed. The rear aero is also much less pitch/ride height sensitive.
A while back I read an article about this topic that pointed out that it was easy to put a hood vent in a position where air would actually be forced into the vent instead of coming out of it
i think ducting may be essential, really need to delineate the functions as there is too much going on everything seems to just average out to the least good solution.
@@nelsonphillips Fair. What I’m curious about is I’ve seen some stuff from other aero peeps saying that straight louvers is better in terms of downforce than a ducted exit without louvers which didn’t make sense to me. Of course that was also on cars with the low pressure area further back so the louvers where more effective.
@@cademckee7276 I've seen a bunch that run a tunnel in the US that get positive results, but they have a more modern car. No car from the early 90s on has this bad front lift, this model just has terrible front aero. I try to emphases it, it might be worth while a major reshaping of the front and rerun the vents and compare that to ducting. A bit easier than modeling a whole new car.
I had a friend who back in the 90's drilled 6 2" holes across the back of the bonnet of their Falcon ute and he claimed it made it a bunch faster. As we were traveling back and forth about 280km at the start and end of the week for work I asked how much difference there was to the speed/time over that difference. His answer was none. I actually wondered if a non destructive option would have been simply to put some spacers in the bonnet mounts and raise the back edge 1/2".
ive seen this done on a electric converted land speed car, they raised the rear of the bonnet by an inch or two to allow the air to escape over the car,
Nothing escapes in a high pressure zone. Amazes me every time I see it, even at “high level” of racing. Yes, I know there’s the occasional exception to this rule. But in general, the only good thing to be placed in front of the windscreen is air intakes for cabin cooling and engine air boxes.
The late 90s Trans-Am has a tilted radiator. It takes hella space being tilted like that, space that some turbo piping would like to be in. Want to do a CFD on the tilted radiator vs upright?
Fancy doing some cad on a N15 Pulsar/Almera? Its a weird one, because iv seen wind tunnel tests, and the smoke is being put in through the front grill and being pulled out the louver, think placement is key, but as you said ducting is the best for results, oh and buying louvers that work is a must
Lovw the video and the info. Have you thought about how hood venting affects something like the Stanceworks Ferrari? Huge bonnet vent for the rad but the engine is in the rear. Id love to see the airflow of a car like that
Might be good to use side vents back over the tire where the air has a time to normalize and the flow toward the rear of the car. Closer to the car door.
@@nelsonphillips I am working in a formula student team and we have been using ansys , do you thinki should switch to open foam. I have been having lots of problems with ansys lately but they are probably due to my lack of experience
@@nelsonphillips do you think i should switch to openfoam from ansys? I have been having lots of problems lately. I am currently working on a formula student team
What air speed are the simulations done at? I imagine a bonnet vent would have a more significant benefit at lower speeds and when stopped in traffic, so may be more useful on a road vehicle?
Hello, great video! I was wondering if you are able to CFD with the hood raised up at the back like a Cowl hood. I've installed hood risers on my 92 Honda Civic and found that crusing highway speeds (80km/h and over) my engine revs drops 500rpm from ~4500 to ~4000 rpm with just the hood risers. But the previous owner removed the undertray and AC block off panel (beside the radiator). With all this information, I've concluded that without those panels I'm getting a lot of drag and lift in the front and under the car. With the hood risers, I'm assuming it's going up and over the body completely and the corner edge of the hood is creating a vortex to cancel out drag from my mirrors. I also have Spoon "style" duck bill wing I would like to add but I'm unsure how it's going to react with the hood raised. I can take pictures, if you're interested. Thanks for the awesome video!!
So you are saying that for same speed the engine is running lower RPMs? Is it manual or automatic? In general, raising the backend of hood is not the best solution as the windscreen causes high pressure zone on that hood - windscreen transition. Of course if the pressure under the hood is even higher, it will help a bit. And yes, missing those panels causes increased drag and lift in front.
Is cowl induction a good system? I've never seen a touring car with this system, only a few drag cars. When you show "average pressure", do higher numbers mean greater efficiency? or am I mistaken?
Im interested alot by how race cars pull heat out of the radiators. Nascar's next gen system is pretty cool and im sure other categories use it. Basically tho man I'd love to design my own intercooler configuration that surpasses the yobo standard I see with coyote falcons where they just plonk a heat exchanger in front of the radiator and condenser with no real ducting. Also those side exit vents must be why the EB2 v8supercar had its front end forcefully changed for EF spec. Better cooling and downforce which were more attributed to the vents than the dives planes by the looks of this ha
Missing a bit of detail here. Are the sidevents only "open" to the engine bay or are they also open to the underfloor and wheel-well? Meaning if they only pull air from the engine bay or also extract from the underfloor. Could you go into it's setup in a bit more detail? Perhaps in a bit more detailed video about BTCC aero and sidevents?
The Super Touring cars all hade very clever and complexed solutions to everything. For very small gains to be honest. The air ducts to and from the rads and to the air boxes was no exception. But all added up, they were amazingly quick. But that you probably already knew and wasn’t what you asked? 🤔 Agree that a more detailed study about these outlets would be very interesting. 👍
@@tturi2 Agree, and it would be very interesting to see further simulations with some ST-style ducting since it was on every car and probably so for a reason. 👍
@@andli461 it's similar to how porshe duct their radiators, I do remember seeing under the bonnet of a ST (it was a Renault) and it had litre bike sized radiators in the foglight type area, at least it looked like it
no, but I'm starting to build some content for drag reduction so that maybe a good addition. It wouldn't be the most difficult vehicle to model. If I get around to it it will still be a while off
baseline became the first model of central vent, the only difference is the extended splitter. Basic aero like this is fairly linear, so you can extrapolate back.
I couldn't quite understand the ending, I didn't understand exactly what "sealing the radiator" meant. Is it proposed to build a duct for the side outlet? Or just the side vent is already okay?
its ducting around the front of the radiator, up until the front grill and lower front opening. It was a bit difficult to get a good image, its in between everything
@@nelsonphillips Hey,I think I get it now, but wouldn't it be better if the duct was behind the radiator? So I imagine it would increase its efficiency. Sorry if the question is stupid, I really found the subject interesting, I have a Vectra B and the "sports" version of it (Irmscher) had these side ducts that I always thought were useless. Your video really intrigued me!
It would be much easier to start from a car that looks like an F1 car. There are no gaps where air flows from the engine bay to the suspension. Engine bay just is a high pressure, and wheel bays are low pressure. You are free to put a carbon bowl over it. Like in a funny car.
they changed it to the magic monetizing mark to 8min, for internal ads. Not going to put internal ads in mine, people don't need more motivation to leave
Apreciate effort you put in your videos, but many of them, forgets to include 1 or more crucial Part or design on a car, and you go chasing your tail about a problem, which will not be there in a real car. hence why you cant wrap your mind around it, in a real car that chaos of air flowing into the engine bay does not happen. if it did, even going straight cars at over 80km will be so dificult to handle, consumption will be out the door, add so much extra noise, that does not happen and all stock cars will have vents on the bonnet sides etc. your flow theory and diagrams could be true if there was no radiator fitted witout any plastic and rubber shrouding around it to completly seal air going into the enginebay. and your diagrams show that, the flow is only going thru your grills and straight thru the gaos and bumper. what youve completly missed is car radiators dont let air to flow thru like that. believe it or not, by the time its out the other side, it has lost 90% or more of its flow. most cars these days, have an aircon condenser, after that intercooler, after that the radiator. im not even talkig performance cars. have you seen the thins on these radiator/exchangers? never thought why so tigh, and even in the gaps they are very finely staggerd thins, if you shine a light thru it, you can't see the other side, literally to restrict straight thru air, 3 sandwiches of tightly packed thins. air just doesnt flow thru like how you've shown, and so much effort goes into the shroud design, so nothing gets in under, top and aroud the radiators aswell, what it does is, the air that needs to go thru, does, and its flow speed almost non existent by the time its gone thru, no chaotic deaf spirals left. and infront of the radiator you get a pocket of fair, infront of the radiator, which literally deflects any air hitting it over and to the sides of the car. if you have a look at grill designs even a big looking audi grills, only has a gap on the top section and a slightly bigger gap at the bottom going to the radiator, the rest isnt open, that much air just isnt needed for the radiators. it cant flow.and ive personally done these test, when the cars moving enginebay temps ar around 35 to 40c, at 80 plus km, outside air 20c measured at air filter box location in the engine bay. mostly due to the hot air getting sucked out from the bottom. as soon as you stop gets upto 65 - 70. when you turn it off heat soaks and can climb upto 95c the newest 2010ish onwards specially Eros cars run normally at 110c, even tough it will show you on your gauge at 90 right in the middle. can be checked with the simplest of diag tools. they now need to run hotter, all for emissions and better thermo dynamics. and they need to get the CATs to get hotter and faster I know this sounds like the opposite of what it we think should be. but thats the truth
As someone who's been studying CFD at the highest level for the past 23 years, I can assure you you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. This is just pure nonsense from start to finish.
False information about internal combustion engines here : 0:12 you say that ices are 35% efficient. That is not true. Toyota dynamic force engines are 40% efficient and 41% in hybrid state.
That image would be dope on a t-shirt.
Yo, every now and then I remember your videos during the day while thinking about my car. I love the logic and research behind it! Keep 'em up, great content
Maybe I missed it but the actual location of the various vents you mention is crucial and that is dictated by where the low pressure areas are. There is plenty of info around as to how to find the location of such low pressure areas. Of course the vent design is relevant to flow as well.
So I was thinking... Could an inlet over the radiator convince some of that turbulent flow up and back inside the engine bay? Sure it might increase the pressure inside a bit but knowing air likes to stick to itself I'd guess that could do some convincing for the noodles.
I did some tastle tests on my mk1 years ago. About 8in from the hood edge as close to the fender as possible and a maximum of 8in long vents has worked well for my cars.
7:17 shows the corner vents
Finally, a chad who knows about the JACCS accord
Love your content mate! front downforce is what I'm been trying to case in my GR Yaris.
Thank you for including side ducting! I've been searching everywhere for research on them. On the topic of super touring cars, would you be able to do a video on the super touring wing profile, with its short chord length and massive gurney? Dimensioned cross sectional drawings of all the wings used can be found in the FIA database of ST cars. I would love to see the cfd results of that wing style on sedan/hatchback!!
Oh my god, dude. Literally the Video I need, right when I habe my morning coffee. I‘m restoring a 968 atm, and the race version had a vented hood, and also the engine bay gets hot as hell. Thanks for that one!
As always I love your videos and the way you iterate adding more and more to the same model each time. It's a really wonderful way for someone like myself to learn a little bit more abouty aerdynamics as it pertains to vehicles and racing.
Interesting. Very surprising results without ducted flow to the vent. I imagined a vent in the low pressure zone near the leading edge of the hood would be a hungry little vacuum cleaner pulling huge volumes of air out.
The WRC engineers have been ducting to their vents for decades. Now we see why.
Lots of cars have been, including supercars
The model reminds of the Pinderwagen
Greatly shown and explained. Interesting results
That's exactly what I was thinking 😂
Very cool how you took the time to break it all down with demonstrated models. Thanks for a cool vid
Always wondered how those corner vents worked!
That’s very interesting how the front impacts the back. On my Mk1, I have the vent just on the edge of the low pressure zone on the hood and I have it raised with a gurney in front. This significantly increases extraction, and actually lowered drag a bit.
I want to try like Audi did in DTM and venting a lot of the coolers into the low pressure areas in the wheel wells.
What are your thoughts on aero balance for these FWD cars? I’ve been targeting about 60/40 downforce for the 65/35 weight distribution. The hope being that it understeers at high speed. The rear aero is also much less pitch/ride height sensitive.
Awesome content. Please do one on front fender vents.
A while back I read an article about this topic that pointed out that it was easy to put a hood vent in a position where air would actually be forced into the vent instead of coming out of it
Great vid, I'll have to rewatch it a few times to understand it properly.
What about pushing and tilting the radiator forward so you can try and get the bonnet vents into the low pressure
i think ducting may be essential, really need to delineate the functions as there is too much going on everything seems to just average out to the least good solution.
@@nelsonphillips Fair. What I’m curious about is I’ve seen some stuff from other aero peeps saying that straight louvers is better in terms of downforce than a ducted exit without louvers which didn’t make sense to me. Of course that was also on cars with the low pressure area further back so the louvers where more effective.
@@cademckee7276 I've seen a bunch that run a tunnel in the US that get positive results, but they have a more modern car. No car from the early 90s on has this bad front lift, this model just has terrible front aero. I try to emphases it, it might be worth while a major reshaping of the front and rerun the vents and compare that to ducting. A bit easier than modeling a whole new car.
Love the aerodynamics breakdown, great work!
Once again thank you very much for your videos.
all i learned from this was aero is incredibly complex on cars and applying them with regard to proper vent placement would be so difficult
I had a friend who back in the 90's drilled 6 2" holes across the back of the bonnet of their Falcon ute and he claimed it made it a bunch faster. As we were traveling back and forth about 280km at the start and end of the week for work I asked how much difference there was to the speed/time over that difference. His answer was none. I actually wondered if a non destructive option would have been simply to put some spacers in the bonnet mounts and raise the back edge 1/2".
ive seen this done on a electric converted land speed car, they raised the rear of the bonnet by an inch or two to allow the air to escape over the car,
Nothing escapes in a high pressure zone.
Amazes me every time I see it, even at “high level” of racing.
Yes, I know there’s the occasional exception to this rule.
But in general, the only good thing to be placed in front of the windscreen is air intakes for cabin cooling and engine air boxes.
Your friend is dreaming. The back of the bonnet is a high pressure area on those sorts of cars.
Bonnet vents can reduce the amount of pressure "pushing the front splitter down" as now the air can more easily escape which reduces downforce.
You need airflow in order to achieve downforce. Without bonnet vents, the air is stalling on the front splitter, not flowing.
The late 90s Trans-Am has a tilted radiator.
It takes hella space being tilted like that, space that some turbo piping would like to be in.
Want to do a CFD on the tilted radiator vs upright?
And the C6 vett
The side vents was very smart, also tilting the hood like on some fwd won't work with the pressure there, now I see why they call it rice.
Fancy doing some cad on a N15 Pulsar/Almera?
Its a weird one, because iv seen wind tunnel tests, and the smoke is being put in through the front grill and being pulled out the louver, think placement is key, but as you said ducting is the best for results, oh and buying louvers that work is a must
Do the corner vents on the bumper rob some of the high pressure at the leading edge of the tires?
haven't checked I'll get back to you on that.
Lovw the video and the info. Have you thought about how hood venting affects something like the Stanceworks Ferrari? Huge bonnet vent for the rad but the engine is in the rear. Id love to see the airflow of a car like that
usually the central vent is closer to the radiator and not in the middle of the bonnet, will it inpact anything?
thanks, this information matters
I'm curious what the result would be of adding a gurney flap to the leading edge of vents.
I note this is Open FOAM but what post processor did you use I like the way you made the car transparent to see the flow lines
Might be good to use side vents back over the tire where the air has a time to normalize and the flow toward the rear of the car. Closer to the car door.
Great video!! What is the CFD software you use ?
openfoam
@@nelsonphillips I am working in a formula student team and we have been using ansys , do you thinki should switch to open foam. I have been having lots of problems with ansys lately but they are probably due to my lack of experience
@@nelsonphillips do you think i should switch to openfoam from ansys? I have been having lots of problems lately. I am currently working on a formula student team
@@nelsonphillips and Paraview for your results viewing? What about mesh generation?
yep, and snappyHexMesh
How about a Naca type duct in reverse on the belly pan? That should create a vacuum in the engine bay by using the laminar flow from under the car
What if we had corner outlets behind the front tyres ?
Im not sure if it could work but ....
I’m wondering the same
Educational. Thank you.
What air speed are the simulations done at? I imagine a bonnet vent would have a more significant benefit at lower speeds and when stopped in traffic, so may be more useful on a road vehicle?
Hello, great video! I was wondering if you are able to CFD with the hood raised up at the back like a Cowl hood.
I've installed hood risers on my 92 Honda Civic and found that crusing highway speeds (80km/h and over) my engine revs drops 500rpm from ~4500 to ~4000 rpm with just the hood risers. But the previous owner removed the undertray and AC block off panel (beside the radiator).
With all this information, I've concluded that without those panels I'm getting a lot of drag and lift in the front and under the car. With the hood risers, I'm assuming it's going up and over the body completely and the corner edge of the hood is creating a vortex to cancel out drag from my mirrors. I also have Spoon "style" duck bill wing I would like to add but I'm unsure how it's going to react with the hood raised.
I can take pictures, if you're interested. Thanks for the awesome video!!
So you are saying that for same speed the engine is running lower RPMs?
Is it manual or automatic?
In general, raising the backend of hood is not the best solution as the windscreen causes high pressure zone on that hood - windscreen transition.
Of course if the pressure under the hood is even higher, it will help a bit. And yes, missing those panels causes increased drag and lift in front.
Is cowl induction a good system? I've never seen a touring car with this system, only a few drag cars. When you show "average pressure", do higher numbers mean greater efficiency? or am I mistaken?
what about the rear of the front wing, like an r34 gtr z tune, or out of the wheels?
Im interested alot by how race cars pull heat out of the radiators.
Nascar's next gen system is pretty cool and im sure other categories use it.
Basically tho man I'd love to design my own intercooler configuration that surpasses the yobo standard I see with coyote falcons where they just plonk a heat exchanger in front of the radiator and condenser with no real ducting.
Also those side exit vents must be why the EB2 v8supercar had its front end forcefully changed for EF spec.
Better cooling and downforce which were more attributed to the vents than the dives planes by the looks of this ha
Missing a bit of detail here.
Are the sidevents only "open" to the engine bay or are they also open to the underfloor and wheel-well? Meaning if they only pull air from the engine bay or also extract from the underfloor. Could you go into it's setup in a bit more detail? Perhaps in a bit more detailed video about BTCC aero and sidevents?
The Super Touring cars all hade very clever and complexed solutions to everything. For very small gains to be honest.
The air ducts to and from the rads and to the air boxes was no exception.
But all added up, they were amazingly quick.
But that you probably already knew and wasn’t what you asked? 🤔
Agree that a more detailed study about these outlets would be very interesting. 👍
the wheel well looked open, but the radiator and the bypass also looked like it could flow out the side vent
@@tturi2 Agree, and it would be very interesting to see further simulations with some ST-style ducting since it was on every car and probably so for a reason. 👍
@@andli461 it's similar to how porshe duct their radiators, I do remember seeing under the bonnet of a ST (it was a Renault) and it had litre bike sized radiators in the foglight type area, at least it looked like it
@@tturi2 Exactly. It wasn’t unusual to have a split radiator solution. Some placed as a V. Some with other packaging.
Pushing air out along the sides of the car would increase drag though.
just did this in NFS U2 searching the same thing with the formula style vents
Any chance you can get a model of the Aptera? I would love to see the results!
no, but I'm starting to build some content for drag reduction so that maybe a good addition. It wouldn't be the most difficult vehicle to model. If I get around to it it will still be a while off
Did you rerun the baseline after extending the front undertray, as it seems in the video you haven't? 6:20
baseline became the first model of central vent, the only difference is the extended splitter. Basic aero like this is fairly linear, so you can extrapolate back.
I couldn't quite understand the ending, I didn't understand exactly what "sealing the radiator" meant. Is it proposed to build a duct for the side outlet? Or just the side vent is already okay?
its ducting around the front of the radiator, up until the front grill and lower front opening. It was a bit difficult to get a good image, its in between everything
@@nelsonphillips Hey,I think I get it now, but wouldn't it be better if the duct was behind the radiator? So I imagine it would increase its efficiency. Sorry if the question is stupid, I really found the subject interesting, I have a Vectra B and the "sports" version of it (Irmscher) had these side ducts that I always thought were useless. Your video really intrigued me!
its a model on a computer... but wow that last one is cooling and functional 😌
Out of curiosity, what kind of setup you have running the simulations and approximately how long this kind or CFD takes with that setup?
this is about 30mil cells, AMR. It takes about 10-12hrs
@@nelsonphillips And how is the computing setup? some sort of HPC cluster or standalone workstation?
@@lauri_autio its actually a high end gaming system, but it is equivalent to a workstation
What components does your Pc have ?
original threadripper and all the ram a consumer grade motherboard can handle(for the period cpu)
All I looked up is how long I need to bake my lasagne.
What about venting it under the car?
It will screw the flat underbody/diffuser efficiency. We need clean air here.
It would be much easier to start from a car that looks like an F1 car. There are no gaps where air flows from the engine bay to the suspension. Engine bay just is a high pressure, and wheel bays are low pressure. You are free to put a carbon bowl over it. Like in a funny car.
you talk like chef john from food wishes
Interesting how you slowed the audio own just enough to pass the magic 10minute youtube monetising mark
they changed it to the magic monetizing mark to 8min, for internal ads. Not going to put internal ads in mine, people don't need more motivation to leave
For the amount of work that went into this he doesn't deserve monetization?
the engine bay vented?
thats kinda sus
Move the engine further back and duct the radiator inlet and outlet 🤓
Why is there nothing under the car model? A lot of air will go in and under not over.
please stop those vocal fries they are annoying af... the content is fucking fire tho
Apreciate effort you put in your videos, but many of them, forgets to include 1 or more crucial Part or design on a car, and you go chasing your tail about a problem, which will not be there in a real car. hence why you cant wrap your mind around it, in a real car that chaos of air flowing into the engine bay does not happen. if it did, even going straight cars at over 80km will be so dificult to handle, consumption will be out the door, add so much extra noise, that does not happen and all stock cars will have vents on the bonnet sides etc. your flow theory and diagrams could be true if there was no radiator fitted witout any plastic and rubber shrouding around it to completly seal air going into the enginebay. and your diagrams show that, the flow is only going thru your grills and straight thru the gaos and bumper. what youve completly missed is car radiators dont let air to flow thru like that. believe it or not, by the time its out the other side, it has lost 90% or more of its flow. most cars these days, have an aircon condenser, after that intercooler, after that the radiator. im not even talkig performance cars. have you seen the thins on these radiator/exchangers? never thought why so tigh, and even in the gaps they are very finely staggerd thins, if you shine a light thru it, you can't see the other side, literally to restrict straight thru air, 3 sandwiches of tightly packed thins. air just doesnt flow thru like how you've shown, and so much effort goes into the shroud design, so nothing gets in under, top and aroud the radiators aswell, what it does is, the air that needs to go thru, does, and its flow speed almost non existent by the time its gone thru, no chaotic deaf spirals left. and infront of the radiator you get a pocket of fair, infront of the radiator, which literally deflects any air hitting it over and to the sides of the car. if you have a look at grill designs even a big looking audi grills, only has a gap on the top section and a slightly bigger gap at the bottom going to the radiator, the rest isnt open, that much air just isnt needed for the radiators. it cant flow.and ive personally done these test, when the cars moving enginebay temps ar around 35 to 40c, at 80 plus km, outside air 20c measured at air filter box location in the engine bay. mostly due to the hot air getting sucked out from the bottom. as soon as you stop gets upto 65 - 70. when you turn it off heat soaks and can climb upto 95c the newest 2010ish onwards specially Eros cars run normally at 110c, even tough it will show you on your gauge at 90 right in the middle. can be checked with the simplest of diag tools. they now need to run hotter, all for emissions and better thermo dynamics. and they need to get the CATs to get hotter and faster I know this sounds like the opposite of what it we think should be. but thats the truth
As someone who's been studying CFD at the highest level for the past 23 years, I can assure you you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. This is just pure nonsense from start to finish.
interresting......... but, that voice............
False information about internal combustion engines here : 0:12 you say that ices are 35% efficient. That is not true. Toyota dynamic force engines are 40% efficient and 41% in hybrid state.
I'm curious what the result would be of adding a gurney flap to the leading edge of vents.