Guest
Several builders of 427 cobras are headed to Boneville next year in an attempt to cross teh 200mph barrier. The current record in such a car is 198mph. We are debating the Cd of these cars and stumbled onto the following site that has some excellent information on coast down testing
Today, one of the guys did several coast down tests in his car and we had the following numbers to work with
Wt = weight
ToF = temperature
Vf = final velocity
Vi = initial velocity
P = Barometric Pressure
Af = Frontage of Car
ET = elapsed time
Wt = 3440
ToF = 75
Vf = 70
Vi = 80
P = 29.96
Af = 14.6
ET = 8.05
Cd= - 0.51135 * 3440 * 534 * ( 0.014 - 0.0125) / (29.96 * 14.6 * 8.05)
Cd = .4763
we were all excited by the results until a flight test engineer poo-poo's us and stated "the formula on teknett does not take into account mechanical friction in the F sub D (sum of all resistive forces). The formula assumes that the only resistive force is drag and ignores friction in the drivetrain, which can be significant."
My question is
Is mechanical friction REALLY that significant in our situation? We are not designing missiles that go Mach4, we are racing an old car 200mph. If we are within 10%, we would be darn happy.
Any thoughts on the issue would be appreciated.
thanks!
Andy
Today, one of the guys did several coast down tests in his car and we had the following numbers to work with
Wt = weight
ToF = temperature
Vf = final velocity
Vi = initial velocity
P = Barometric Pressure
Af = Frontage of Car
ET = elapsed time
Wt = 3440
ToF = 75
Vf = 70
Vi = 80
P = 29.96
Af = 14.6
ET = 8.05
Cd= - 0.51135 * 3440 * 534 * ( 0.014 - 0.0125) / (29.96 * 14.6 * 8.05)
Cd = .4763
we were all excited by the results until a flight test engineer poo-poo's us and stated "the formula on teknett does not take into account mechanical friction in the F sub D (sum of all resistive forces). The formula assumes that the only resistive force is drag and ignores friction in the drivetrain, which can be significant."
My question is
Is mechanical friction REALLY that significant in our situation? We are not designing missiles that go Mach4, we are racing an old car 200mph. If we are within 10%, we would be darn happy.
Any thoughts on the issue would be appreciated.
thanks!
Andy