Amateur aerodynamics

Jim Gerwing

Well-Known Member
image(42).jpg
 

John Tolhurst

Zen MBB Master
transition from body to fairing

I have a selectable screen orientation, so no worries.

I see what you are aiming at. The difficulty is always the transition from the body to the tail fairing. Or from the helmet. On the RAAM bike you may have noticed we put the bottle cages right ont he back of the headrest, and the headrest cushioning without gaps to the body.
 

Jim Gerwing

Well-Known Member
Commentary

Two features that bear explanation:
A) From Eric (I believe) I covered the rear wheel in storm door, heat shrinkable plastic made possible by virtue of using the braking surface on the rims which are freed up by the disc brakes. One draw back is the space left open near the hub on the brake side due to lack of clearance by the caliper housing which I have a work around planned for the next version. I have not experienced a performance benefit yet but neither a detriment. It makes a cool sound when I glance off small rocks.
B) From Fred (I believe, Flinstone) I used double layered cardboard to fashion my first ever tail box complete with internal bracing. No aerodynamic penalties (or benefits) incurred but I did discover a very quick method of turning a chick magnet into an object of scorn and derision. I am encouraged, though, as I have for my next post tail box 2.0, a quantum leap forward in cardboard construction.
 

richa

Active Member
More!

Have you considered fairing the entire rear from the bottom of the seat to the top of the headrest?

Have it taper together a foot or so past the rear wheel. That would give you lots of space to put all the sponsors names that will be clamoring to support you and this aerodynamic marvel of modern technology.

And it might make you go faster too!
 

billyk

Guru
I knew the Vendetta was light, but ...

I knew the Vendetta was light, but I had no idea it floated up to the ceiling! (First pic). Or you got some kind of helium gas in that there tail box?
 

Jeremy S

Dude
Do you normally wear a helmet

Do you normally wear a helmet on your Vendetta, Jim? (These images present a few reasons to ask this question...)
 

Charles.Plager

Recumbent Quant
Find yourself a good hill and

Find yourself a good hill and a GPS (maybe a smart phone). Ride to various speeds and coast from a given point. You can solve for your CdA (and rolling resistance) of your different setups and that will give you some real feedback as to how much different tail boxes/fairings/aero helmets/wheels are working for you.
 

randyspann

Well-Known Member
But Charles -- In this case

But Charles -- In this case the hill would go up! Maybe he would roll backwards!
 

Jim Gerwing

Well-Known Member
Aero update - a bad idea

Well, not necessarily a bad idea but I now know of an aero addition that doesn't promote 'dynamics'.
The major problem seemed to be the fairing of my body to the added back piece. As well, one aero site I visited suggested as a rule of thumb that whatever width you present to the direction of travel, you need at least 3X the length to the point where the separated air comes back together (aspect ratio). As the title of the thread suggests, I am not an aero dynamicist, but after attempting to fill the space between body and arms with foam, I gave it up and faired the underside of the seat back to the trailing edge of the back wheel which seems to add no harm (testing in progress) and, this is bad science, I know because I am adding another variable, I 'storm-doored' my front wheel as well. (Which I tested tonight in more environmental wind than what I would have considered ideal) The results tonight were inconclusive but encouraging. I'll report after a fair trial. As for the back piece, poor showing.
image(50).jpg
 

Jim Gerwing

Well-Known Member
Commentary on front wheel cover

My photography skills are also amateurish. I attempted to get a background and light exposure that would show off the sheeting. My apologies for the distortion but the pic does show the nice taught fitting over the spokes. You can see the valve-stem access. What you can't make out so well is the cardboard (cereal box) center 'halo'. Where this halo ends I put a cardboard hub on the inside of the spokes to prevent a large gap and possible 'parachuting'. Whether or not this is a potential/actual effect, I don't know, I'm an amateur working on intuition. When I put the wheel back on, I had an issue with the placement of my computer magnet but this was easily remedied with a slit, repositioning and a piece of tape over the incision.
In terms of performance, one must be very careful with crosswinds and, in particular, gusts. I have been using this in low wind conditions but buffeting from large traffic requires attention. This cover seems to have a greater effect on aero benefits than the rear cover.
On a side note, I shaved my legs and arms, and bought a skull cap to cover my ears. So, take note, you are dealing with an amateur and an 'enthusiast' as they say in England.
Slipping the surly bonds of earth...
JG
 

Jim Gerwing

Well-Known Member
Video

Try Jim Gerwing on Facebook. '56km/hr' works on my desk top (but not my iPad because it doesn't support adobe flash player).
That's 56k per hour (instantaneous) not 56km in one hour.
JG
 

Jake

Member
Steering at speed.

Yes, a front wheel disk will provide greater aero benefit than a rear, but there is a reason they are generally seen on indoor trackbikes and not outdoor road bikes, particularly at the kind of speeds that you are clearly hoping to attain.

Jake

 

Jim Gerwing

Well-Known Member
Front fairing

My first front fairing is barely visible on my Facebook video. I tried another idea on the weekend but it was a disaster except that I got a new idea. See below. If the shape turns out, I may use it for a fiberglass version.
image(52).jpg
image(54).jpg
 
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