Building the FASTEST RC F1 Car

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Can I make this RC car faster with a ground-effect fan? Sponsored by World of Warships! Play World of Warships for FREE and unlock special D-Day missions here: wo.ws/4br7Vhz
    Mega thanks to Arrma for sending me the Arrma Limitless and all the tires, batteries and chargers used in this video www.arrma-rc.com/
    👉🏼 Download stuff from the Project Air website projectair.co.uk/
    👉🏼 Follow me on Instagram / jameswhomsley
    👉🏼 Patreon sign up / jameswhomsley
    DISCLAIMER: This video is purely for entertainment value. Personal use of video content is at your own risk. Recreations of experiments, activities and projects are the sole legal responsibility of the person(s) involved in replicating them. I can not be liable for any information or misinformation, wrongful use, damage to personal property, death or any circumstances that result from replication of any projects seen. Be safe!
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1K

  • @Project-Air
    @Project-Air  Před 21 dnem +61

    Download World of Warships for FREE today! wo.ws/3V46noT

    • @HS92843
      @HS92843 Před 21 dnem +4

      Can I get it on Xbox ??

    • @RekySai
      @RekySai Před 21 dnem +2

      Personally I unsubscribe from CZcamsrs who love to lie. F1 is a racing division.... Convoluting it into what ever you want is dumb

    • @boimcpickle
      @boimcpickle Před 21 dnem

      @@RekySai 💀

    • @CrayCrayCrayfish72
      @CrayCrayCrayfish72 Před 21 dnem +2

      @@RekySai F1 also refers to the chassis on the F1 car

    • @Starlite123
      @Starlite123 Před 20 dny +2

      Maybe a rubber skirt and tape at the bottom just to let it glide over the bumps?

  • @ivanmirandawastaken
    @ivanmirandawastaken Před 22 dny +1685

    FIND - A - TUNNEL (with a flat ceiling)

    • @junatah5903
      @junatah5903 Před 21 dnem +41

      Every tunel has a ceiling, doesn't have to be flat either.

    • @sabyasachitalukdar4314
      @sabyasachitalukdar4314 Před 21 dnem +32

      Build a tunnel with flat ceiling

    • @LordRidler
      @LordRidler Před 21 dnem +45

      ​@@junatah5903should be flat to drive this car on the ceiling I guess

    • @testpilotian3188
      @testpilotian3188 Před 21 dnem

      @@ivanmirandawastaken just go to the London Underground on a slow day, plenty of flat tunnels there lol

    • @bakerfx4968
      @bakerfx4968 Před 21 dnem +35

      There’s a guy trying to do that full scale and they’re building their own track for it. Project Air should do a scaled down version lol

  • @A1pha012
    @A1pha012 Před 22 dny +506

    If anyone is interested in fan cars, the McMurtry Spéirling recently broke track records, proving that ground effect is very effective under the right circumstances.

    • @Losthewaronemus
      @Losthewaronemus Před 21 dnem +18

      I was about to start yapping about this car when I saw your comment. Clearly a man of culture, or Carwow enjoyer

    • @user-zr1gy8cp4l
      @user-zr1gy8cp4l Před 21 dnem +11

      You can’t forget the Gordon Murray T.50 as well

    • @Bholla64A9
      @Bholla64A9 Před 21 dnem +9

      the t.50 uses the fan in a very different way which only produces downforce at high speed and does little to increase the actual downforce of the car. it is mostly to make the car "stand out"

    • @A1pha012
      @A1pha012 Před 21 dnem

      @@Losthewaronemus Bit of both 😉 But also had an interest in MyEnergi for a while.

    • @Thefrogbread
      @Thefrogbread Před 21 dnem

      Yes

  • @BPSspace
    @BPSspace Před 21 dnem +227

    James you MUST do a part 2 and see if you can get it to drive upside down! 🏎

    • @thesunnynationg
      @thesunnynationg Před 20 dny +2

      Driver 61 YT channel
      if you want to see someone do it for real.
      hasn't done it YET but preparations are running for a year now.
      and he is really adamant about that, he has surrounded himself with very smart F1 ppl to transform a Formula car into a specialized "upside down car".
      he got a big building company to build a dedicated tunnel just for that.
      I can't wait until he announces the date.

    • @jordanliszewski6549
      @jordanliszewski6549 Před 19 dny +1

      He needs to have a skirt on hinges. Which is how every car now days does it.

  • @stevezimmerman5644
    @stevezimmerman5644 Před 21 dnem +127

    There is a BBC documentary called "Gentlemen, Raise Your Skirts". About the ground effect cars Williams had back then. No fan but shaped underfloor and the skirts were spring loaded carbon strips that could retract up and down into a slot so they could touch the track surface and follow the imperfections in the track. Check it out if you can, it's awesome if you like those old BBC doc's.

    • @paulbarnett227
      @paulbarnett227 Před 21 dnem

      I remember that! Wow - that makes me feel old 👴

    • @TheBillzilla
      @TheBillzilla Před 21 dnem +9

      One of my fave quotes is from that, when Alan Jones complains about the ride quality of the car when they tried solid suspension. Frank Williams replies, "perhaps you could sit on your wallet, Alan?"

    • @stevezimmerman5644
      @stevezimmerman5644 Před 20 dny +3

      @@TheBillzilla The most gentlemanly burn ever. They don't make them like sir Frank anymore.

    • @That_guy_69
      @That_guy_69 Před 19 dny +1

      BBC💀

  • @lovrospacal245
    @lovrospacal245 Před 22 dny +180

    the long awaited sequel is here

  • @Enter-wl3zf
    @Enter-wl3zf Před 22 dny +217

    Some suggestions:
    How about a skirt made from a brush?
    How about putting the ground effect tray on a separate set of suspensions from the main chassis? One irl example is the Lotus88
    One I've been asking myself watching the video is what lead to the choice of a propeller instead of an impeller to evacuate the ground effect tray, as the latter is way better at producing a pressure difference?

    • @Unapersonaconunmicroscopio
      @Unapersonaconunmicroscopio Před 21 dnem +14

      That’s right, why a propeller instead of an impeller?

    • @superbmediacontentcreator
      @superbmediacontentcreator Před 21 dnem +11

      The brush idea is good but does add friction as it is in actual contact with the ground.

    • @Guybrush1816351
      @Guybrush1816351 Před 21 dnem +30

      Windscreen wiper blades might be good source, have metal spine with rubber in them.

    • @CHRIS_snm
      @CHRIS_snm Před 21 dnem +18

      I think thick rubber would be the best bet! Maybe a bike inner tube, or a piece of old tire!

    • @Enter-wl3zf
      @Enter-wl3zf Před 21 dnem +14

      @@superbmediacontentcreator my reasoning would be that a brush is flexible enough to deal with rough terrain, while doing a reasonable job at blocking airflow. The brush hair would also be trimmed through usage, by contacting the ground, reducing friction and tuning the system over time.
      The problem with a hard barrier as we saw in the video is that once it hits the ground the wheels suddenly lose traction, which could be reduced by using a brush skirt.
      Some hovercraft designs use brush skirts, which is why I thought of it. Granted there they try to keep air in instead of out.
      edit: I'm not sure where I saw it and cant find it atm.

  • @kelevra558
    @kelevra558 Před 21 dnem +83

    The issue was you locked the suspension out. You effectively cancelled out the mechanical grip of the car. In turn, you also proved the effectiveness of the design. Double edged sword so to speak. You must have heard of the McMurty special right? If not....bro.... where have you been?

    • @deaddirt3214
      @deaddirt3214 Před 13 dny +3

      Mcmurty at goodwood is unreal. I thought it was fake.

    • @easttennstudent
      @easttennstudent Před 13 dny +1

      ​@@deaddirt3214same! The first time I saw it I thought the playback speed was increased. And the car kind of looks like a cartoon, just the way it's shaped.

    • @kelevra558
      @kelevra558 Před 12 dny

      @@deaddirt3214 haaahahaha!!!! Never can tell these days right??? I saw this virtually PERFECT girl the other day. My initial thought was "meh....A.I. derived imagery. Nobody's that cute." Then i slapped myself in the face and nutted myself on my truck bedside because it was borderline special needs thinking.

  • @superbmediacontentcreator
    @superbmediacontentcreator Před 21 dnem +202

    The Chaparral did this long before the F1 car you cited. The concept is valid but was outlawed because the fan throws stuff all over the following cars.

    • @benkirkland5354
      @benkirkland5354 Před 21 dnem +13

      Was about to say the same thing. Can-Am allowed innovations like this because F1 had too many restrictions. Once proven, F1 adopted it.

    • @superbmediacontentcreator
      @superbmediacontentcreator Před 21 dnem +1

      @@benkirkland5354 As I was growing up I cheered this and the STP turbine car both of which failed for different technical reasons. Had they foreseen the things that ultimately killed them they would have revolutionized the sector before being simply "ruled off" the tracks. I think the electric boost shows the most promise in the near term for F1 unless that like the Grid Girls it gets banned...

    • @mattg5852
      @mattg5852 Před 21 dnem +7

      As a gran turismo player, I remember having a lot of fun with this car

    • @MrMagooRC
      @MrMagooRC Před 21 dnem +11

      The Jim Hall's Chaparral 2J was also closer in concept to this than the Brab, as the on the 2J had a separate snowmobile engine, so fan rotation speed wasn't a direct relation of 'main' engine speed. More consistent 'suck' across the entire speed range of the car, rather than more 'suck' at higher main enginer RPM.

    • @Regular_Thomas
      @Regular_Thomas Před 21 dnem +3

      I'm sure it would throw a bunch of stuff around, but because it mostly made all of its downforce from the fan system if for whatever reason the suction between the car and the track, like a big enough bump or a skirt was broken it would lose all grip and be very dangerous. Imagine it just launching mid corner straight off the track. Great system in an ideal world but potentially deadly in a real world

  • @thequesomanishere
    @thequesomanishere Před 20 dny +21

    I believe the Chaparral 2J had its skirt mounted to the suspension, not the chassis. This way the skirt stays flat with the wheels, and doesn't move with the body. Try mounting the skirt to the ends of the suspension near the ball joints, and I bet you'll have more consistent suction and longer lasting skirts.

    • @vhmakino
      @vhmakino Před 8 dny

      estava procurando esta reposta!

  • @RetinaBurner
    @RetinaBurner Před 21 dnem +56

    High pressure flexible 'tubular' perimeter skirt, low pressure chamber: Forget the walls, replace the skirting with something akin to a hovercraft skirt, but with the skirting pressurized to keep it inflated. I also suggest a tough material, as it will be in contact with the ground at high speeds.

    • @superbmediacontentcreator
      @superbmediacontentcreator Před 21 dnem +3

      You're right in concept but there is difficulty with this sort of thing at scale. There are just some technologies and materials that don't scale down well. This is the case with your skirting material. It is very heavy and thick and hard to reproduce at a small size and get the same robust survival enjoyed in a 1:1 environment.

    • @geistmetzger
      @geistmetzger Před 21 dnem +9

      Maybe the rubber squeegee from a wiper blade may work. Semi rigid but flexible/durable edge

    • @petearundel166
      @petearundel166 Před 21 dnem +7

      Brush strips work too.

    • @Enter-wl3zf
      @Enter-wl3zf Před 21 dnem

      ⁠@@petearundel166Thats what I’m thinking! :D

    • @bjrn-oskarrnning2740
      @bjrn-oskarrnning2740 Před 21 dnem +4

      I thought maybe a spring-loaded sliding door-style wall with a low friction material at the bottom might work, or just some replaceable steel bits.

  • @ThePippin89
    @ThePippin89 Před 21 dnem +12

    Fun fact. Gordon Murray (the designer of the BT46B fitted an aeroplanes altimeter in the cars so that it would show whether the underfloor was sealed. The drivers had a problem that the skirt would be damaged and they wouldn't know and suddenly find themselves going through a corner about 40mph quicker than they could without the ground effect and having a colossal crash. So if the altimeter was in the green they could push. If it wasn't they had to back off.

  • @AndyFromBeaverton
    @AndyFromBeaverton Před 20 dny +9

    The original Lotus car had sideboards mounted on slots so they would always adjust themselves to be touching the ground. Your front skirt-board doesn't need to create a perfect seal to the ground. If it's bouncing on the ground it will be slowing your car down. Some of the F1 cars used broom bristles to create a seal.

  • @skazztheterrible
    @skazztheterrible Před 21 dnem +32

    You found what brabham found - it is really hard to get a good seal on a road surface. Passive underfloor ground effect ended up quite quickly outpacing the active design. Fun tho! And you didn't have an actual human driver experiencing the rapid fluctuations in the effect; the drivers were terrified by it.

    • @neblolthecarnerd
      @neblolthecarnerd Před 21 dnem +5

      I wouldn't say it outpaced the brabham because the brabham got banned after 1 race. If that car also got developed i reckon it would still stay ahead of the fanless ground effect cars.

    • @iskierka8399
      @iskierka8399 Před 21 dnem +5

      @@neblolthecarnerd It only participated in one race, it was banned after the season but voluntarily not run, partly because of not seeing the point, but also because of practical issues - such as the fact it was connected to the engine's crankshaft. This meant shifting in corners would cause abrupt changes in traction and made it very dicey to drive at the limits.

    • @neblolthecarnerd
      @neblolthecarnerd Před 21 dnem +5

      @@iskierka8399 I thought the mutual agreement was kinda a more polite way of withdrawing so they didn't actually get banned until the rules got rewritten. Especially given how easily it won the race it did do.

    • @kentonian
      @kentonian Před 21 dnem

      Bernie Eccelstone already had his eye on taking over the running of the sport at that stage, he withdrew the car to stay pally with the organisers. I don’t think golden Murray and the rest of the team knew this at the time

    • @Avetho
      @Avetho Před 21 dnem

      @@neblolthecarnerd The Brabham was in Lotus' sights to get it banned after they sank so much R&D money into aero downforce, so I think you're right.
      Edit: I also believe the Brabham team put a filter on it to fix the complaints of drivers getting slightly smoked out by the low levels of road dust and the few pebbles pelting their cars, and it only reduced the downforce slightly.

  • @industrialmonk
    @industrialmonk Před 21 dnem +50

    If my memory is correct the seal was made in more than 1 over lapping section so the road contact area could be worn away then slide down to replace it. Eg had a total loss section that lowers as it's warn away.

    • @Avetho
      @Avetho Před 21 dnem +3

      iirc, it was also sprung so the skirts stayed in contact with the road surface.

  • @glumpy10
    @glumpy10 Před 21 dnem +5

    Love to see this run on a basketball court where the floor was perfectly smooth. That would let it really corner.
    Seems like for the skirt, some thing pliable but durable like silicone sheet would be good. Great vid as usual!

  • @ValRC1
    @ValRC1 Před 21 dnem +11

    This is extremely sick, and you pulled it off so well! I have been thinking about doing something like this since seeing the Formula Student car from ETH Zürich use a similar approach for reaching 0-100km/h in under a second. IMO it's impressive how much extra downforce you ended up getting in a straight line on this.
    To improve the seal on bumpy roads, maybe you could try a 3d printed flexible TPU base with a sort of skirt around it from thin PTFE that is too long and just bends out when the car is further to the ground, but then extends once it goes more above it or over a bump?

  • @peraltarockets
    @peraltarockets Před 20 dny +4

    "tea, obviously"
    James, engineering in the best British tradition.

  • @ChristopherKlepel
    @ChristopherKlepel Před 21 dnem +9

    Why can't you make your skirt out of rubber? You could even use an old bike tire inner tube.

  • @chaileeportraits
    @chaileeportraits Před 13 dny +2

    15:06 love the bangs and pops😂😂😂

  • @Fin240R
    @Fin240R Před 21 dnem +4

    Active suspension with this on an RC car would be awesome!!!

  • @JonahZandona
    @JonahZandona Před 21 dnem +3

    its always good to see him upload and it makes my day

  • @TinMar79
    @TinMar79 Před 21 dnem +5

    I like this concept a lot. Maybe you should try door brush seals for the skirt. First they are flexible, second durable and last you brush stones away in front of the car.

    • @superbmediacontentcreator
      @superbmediacontentcreator Před 21 dnem

      The problem with your idea is that the contact adds drag. What you are envisioning is a reverse hovercraft which is valid but hard to do at scale...

    • @Avetho
      @Avetho Před 21 dnem

      I think sprung segmented skirts would be best, its what Chaparral did with the 2J, and it worked beautifully. The only difficulty is doing so effectively at RC scales.

    • @superbmediacontentcreator
      @superbmediacontentcreator Před 20 dny

      @@redmk3t You might want to read previous comments before bestowing us with your brilliance.

    • @redmk3t
      @redmk3t Před 19 dny

      @superbmediacontentcreator The problem with your idea is that it's NOT valid on any scale. You probably shouldn't come up with ideas

    • @superbmediacontentcreator
      @superbmediacontentcreator Před 19 dny

      @@redmk3t Iditol leaving a comment that matches their personality... stupid.

  • @FLTfilmstuff
    @FLTfilmstuff Před 22 dny +1

    This is epic, ur an awesome creator, don’t stop being awesome!

  • @JPTulo
    @JPTulo Před 21 dnem

    Most under appreciated creator on the platform. Great project!!

  • @lesternielson9280
    @lesternielson9280 Před 20 dny +3

    the small bits of debris, gravel and overall road roughness at the scale of your RC car, would be similar to trying to drive a formula car on a 4x4 off road trail. perhaps try testing again on a smoother airport runway?

  • @TheAussieAviator747
    @TheAussieAviator747 Před 22 dny +9

    You are so inspiring for young engineers/aviators. Keep doing your thing!

  • @gglobot
    @gglobot Před dnem

    to have the best effect, you have to attache the soft part of the skirt to the suspension triangle, Like this you can keep the skirt to a constent high from the ground. The skirt can be attached on one side to the rigid part (your aluminium board). And on the other side to a bar connecting the suspension triangle ( 2 tubes can be imbricated in each other so that they can slide and allow the suspension to work)

  • @rustyscrewsrc
    @rustyscrewsrc Před 21 dnem

    As always, great video! Keep inspiring builders, young and old (you got me back into the hobby and building fun creations after a 30 year break)! Thanks again!

  • @testpilotian3188
    @testpilotian3188 Před 21 dnem +9

    The part you missed, or couldn’t replicate from the original fan car, was the skirts moved up and down inside a channel in the sidepods so that they maintained the perfect hight to the road all the time, the last time I saw one it was effectively a draft excluder bolted to a piece of plastic that sat in the channel. I’m also fairly sure they didn’t completely enclose the skirts at the front (and probably the back) of the car as that was how they drew the air in to create the vacuum. There’s no way this is practical to do on that size of car but maybe a bigger one?

    • @superbmediacontentcreator
      @superbmediacontentcreator Před 21 dnem +3

      Actually, he could have achieved this with a spring-loaded frame under the vehicle with a segmented rolling edge. The challenge as I mentioned in a previous comment is that some materials just don't scale well and many solutions add drag from their contact with the surface. Remember the aggregate in the roadway is 1:1 not scaled to the car used for testing. This naturally hampers and intrudes on any of the solutions and improvements.

    • @TimInertiatic
      @TimInertiatic Před 21 dnem

      That sounds like the Lotus ground effect skirt solution. I've not seen the Brabham layout to be fair

    • @testpilotian3188
      @testpilotian3188 Před 21 dnem +1

      @@TimInertiatic they all worked on the same principle, either a sheet of plastic or one with draft excluders on the bottom.

    • @testpilotian3188
      @testpilotian3188 Před 21 dnem +1

      @@superbmediacontentcreator in this case, size matters then lol

    • @Avetho
      @Avetho Před 21 dnem +1

      @@testpilotian3188 Lol it sure does, because we know the Square-Cube law and the exponential relationship between velocity and fluid drag makes "RC Scale Speed" one of those measurements that don't mean anything. It not only affects the material properties, but the physical properties and the vehicle behavior. These RC cars also have a power to weight ratio that is immense compared to actual cars, the Traxxas Maxx V2 for example has just shy of a 1 to 1 power to weight ratio if my quick maths were right (and they may not be since I'm not full awake yet), weighing about 0.2 kilos but making 0.16 horsepower from a 6 volt, 20 amp peak draw.
      Edit: Actually, its likely far above a 1 to 1 power to weight, now that I think about it. Since those things supposedly draw like up to 100 amps or more, and the motor gets to see the full 4s 16 or so volts, and that's 1.6kW, which means 2.15 horsepower. On a 200 gram vehicle. That's over a 10 to 1 power to weight ratio. Come on stupid brain, work with me today! The rocks ain't rocking right right now XD

  • @OpenSourceLowTech
    @OpenSourceLowTech Před 21 dnem +3

    Fold of thin kevlar for the skirt? Maybe fibreglass but would be less durable.
    Also might get better results from an odd numbered blade fan?

  • @rupertwhite7683
    @rupertwhite7683 Před 21 dnem

    Great project again! This is exactly my thought for pushing the next level of the RC car speed challenges. Down force with little drag penalty. Also hub motors to remove the drive train issues and be able to use gyro stabilised DTC to keep it straight. Tyres are the only unanswered question.

  • @RCLifeChoseMe
    @RCLifeChoseMe Před 13 dny

    I enjoy doing RC experiments from time to time too. Subscribed

  • @Leon-vp3vb
    @Leon-vp3vb Před 22 dny +3

    Cut rubber strip from bicycle tube, and use it as floor vaccum seal for tray.

  • @geistmetzger
    @geistmetzger Před 21 dnem +6

    The rubber squeegee from a wiper blade may have enough durability to last. It could allow for a small travel to be added back into the suspension to help with its jumpiness

    • @Carrot421911
      @Carrot421911 Před 21 dnem

      Yeah, rubber is the way to go. Much more flexible and durable than foamboard.

  • @jetbeast
    @jetbeast Před 21 dnem

    amazing videos as always!i hope to get at least somewhat near your skill one day!

  • @jeremyurquhart7456
    @jeremyurquhart7456 Před 22 dny

    Love your experiments on here..top content ❤

  • @MattTheMartian-qc6pr
    @MattTheMartian-qc6pr Před 21 dnem +3

    The car is bouncing because you disabled the suspension

  • @Yetiboy_FCTT
    @Yetiboy_FCTT Před 21 dnem

    Great video yet again 😃
    The original F1 cars used thick rubber to seal the edges, but they used springs so they could move a bit through the undulating surfaces.
    Might be worth looking into 😊

  • @TregTube
    @TregTube Před 22 dny

    I have been waiting for this video for so long

  • @29pesos51
    @29pesos51 Před 22 dny +10

    Damn it... It's all over the screen now 😕

    • @JPTulo
      @JPTulo Před 21 dnem

      😆🤣

    • @Vroome942
      @Vroome942 Před 21 dnem +2

      Tf is bro talking about 💀🤣

  • @samuelmorris6361
    @samuelmorris6361 Před 22 dny +6

    Under a minute gang

  • @pbrod8325
    @pbrod8325 Před 16 dny

    Great job!!!
    To overcome the weight issue - powering the fan by the differential/ an output shaft would be ideal. Might be complicated but it bet you can pull it off!

  • @christopping5876
    @christopping5876 Před 21 dnem

    Excellent video, as always. No theatrics, unnecessary sounds or emojis. Just a logical, well edited video. Thanks. Waiting for the next one.

  • @jaquu
    @jaquu Před 20 dny +3

    So so bad clickbait title 👍

  • @JayL781
    @JayL781 Před 21 dnem

    I'm about 1 minute into the video
    I had always wondered why no one has tried to do this with an RC car 👏👍😁. I'm already loving the video 🤤

  • @Celsian
    @Celsian Před 11 dny

    12:19 And that's exactly why this was banned in F1 a couple of years later. Awesome recreation, really amazing they were brave enough to try this in manned vehicles.

  • @reecegobbo
    @reecegobbo Před 21 dnem +2

    Just a suggestion but maybe you could get a leaf blower and blow off the road as much as possible to have a nice smooth and consistent surface to test on .. maybe remove some variables?... Love the videos keep it up 👍

  • @NullusestMihi
    @NullusestMihi Před 6 dny

    I would also like to add that on modern formula one cars, the “vacuum chamber” becomes a lot higher the closer it gets to the end of the car. I can see that your vacuum chamber is a consistent height throughout and it reduces the total amount of possible ground effect because you aren’t making the most of the available area. My suggestion is to cut a rectangle on the bottom of the chassis and raise the roof of the vacuum chamber to increase the vacuum. Another thing that I’ve read a lot on is connecting the vacuum chamber to the bottom of the suspension and replacing the foam boards with a brush material and I would like to second that idea because it is a great idea to keep the vacuum consistent. I would also like to see you use a rubber seal like the ones used for car doors and refrigerators if you have the chance. And another thing, please make the exit for the air parallel to the ground because while you are driving, the small amount of air inside the vacuum chamber is crashing against the rear wall of the chamber before getting sucked out, so might as well replace the rear wall entirely with the propeller to reduce air resistance. This will also give you more vertical space to raise the roof of the vacuum chamber even further and make the suction stronger. I hope my ideas are of use to you, and keep making awesome content!

  • @fiorevicidomini8220
    @fiorevicidomini8220 Před 16 dny

    Very nice project! Congrats! Next step you can try to seal the bottom with 3mm thick rubber and test it on a smooth surface like a flat parking area... I'm shure you will have great results..

  • @marksteps1712
    @marksteps1712 Před 13 dny

    i'm an f1 nut and i know back in the day they had a semi rigid skirt that would bounce inside a receiver style channel, i wonder if you could construct something like that and try t again.
    despite the porpoising as soon as that fan cut off it was going straight to the scene of the accident, awesome look, need a 2.0 video

  • @yindyamarra
    @yindyamarra Před 22 dny

    Been waiting for ages, Brilliant vid

  • @willwill5595
    @willwill5595 Před 18 dny

    I have been watching CZcams since it began . This is the ABSOLUTE BEST video EVER. Thank you SIR! Society needs you to be a teacher. The education system in every country needs to hire you as an online mandatory teaching lesson.

  • @matthewnardin7304
    @matthewnardin7304 Před 21 dnem +2

    If you scaled up the small bumps and cracks in the road it would be like taking a life size F1 down a gravel road. Surprised it worked as well as it did.

  • @iblong9505
    @iblong9505 Před 21 dnem

    Man this channel keeps racking up one crazy project after another

  • @H_chapman17
    @H_chapman17 Před 22 dny

    Great video, I'm sure Adrian Newey would be proud

  • @Remmes
    @Remmes Před 18 dny

    The skirts on F1 cars were moveable pieces slotted into the sides which would allow for the sealing over bumps. I'd love to see you build more on this idea, maybe trying more skirt materials, or even changing the fan duct shape.

  • @Urasuperstar
    @Urasuperstar Před 15 dny

    From what I studied, the vaccum skirts on the bt46b were attatched to the suspension so that they'd always stay level despite the body movement.

  • @SINIS0RSA
    @SINIS0RSA Před 21 dnem

    Imagine the rear edf installed on 1-axis servo controlled mount to provide some thrust vectoring. Ofc it would require some flexible sleeve to keep ground effect low pressure -side from leaking.
    Or maybe some active aero added to this car to help with cornering stability, and top speed (with drag reduction system).
    I’m just throwing some stupid ideas, but keep up your awesome work! 🙂

  • @gafrers
    @gafrers Před 21 dnem

    Love this project

  • @GraphicVolcano707
    @GraphicVolcano707 Před 15 dny

    Although this might be hard to accomplish, but there was a design on the chaparral 2j regarding the side skirts. The 2j was a fan car, but had issues with maintaining proper suction. The car had a mechanism where the skirts would move up and down as it was linked to the suspension, preventing it from scraping against the track surface

  • @evaciano1154
    @evaciano1154 Před 21 dnem

    JIMNY! very good watch and well done on your further progress.

  • @Unapersonaconunmicroscopio

    YESSSSSSSSS HE UPLOADED THE SEQUEL OF MY FAVORITE VIDEO YESSSSSSS

  • @CristiNeagu
    @CristiNeagu Před 14 dny

    8:58 You were right the first time around. That, my friend, is a ship, not a boat. When it turns it leans to the outside. Boats lean into the curve.

  • @Croxy115
    @Croxy115 Před 20 dny +1

    Imagine someone was just casually walking on the side of the road and then he hear a sound but he doesn't know what it exactly is and after he go around the corner, a fast tiny car suddenly goes right pass him, he stand there in awe but not even 5 seconds later he feels a sting on his right foot when he looked down, his right foot is gone.

  • @soviut303
    @soviut303 Před 21 dnem +1

    You should test this in a gym or any place with polished concrete. Additionally, the skirt could probably be made out of overlapping flexible "tongues" that angle backwards and can bend when pressed down. Combat robots often use this as a flexible wheel system that's difficult to damage.

  • @josephreber525
    @josephreber525 Před 21 dnem

    Well Done 👍👍👍

  • @christopher.knight
    @christopher.knight Před 15 dny

    For the skirt you could try some flexible rubber like a hovercraft, or perhaps some brush material like a paint brush. Try soft or hard bristles and see if there's a difference.
    I imagine you want something soft enough to adjust to the road surface without losing too much air pressure, although losing some air pressure might be preferable to losing traction on the tyres.

  • @aL3891_
    @aL3891_ Před 21 dnem +2

    engineering helper.. _put a ring on it james_

  • @rueshady
    @rueshady Před 17 dny

    If You ever revisit this things conside getting a flexible material like Silicon Door dust stoppers, can keep some of the small rocks and debree out of the fan intake, being sturdy enough to get some laps in, being flexible can help to mantain the vacum on uneven terrain. Sick video i'm suscribing dor more wacky Ideas

  • @bfgreg1
    @bfgreg1 Před 18 dny +1

    The rubber from a bike wheel tube might be good for the skirt since it's flexible and coulsd run along the ground without much damage.

  • @mikehaberski4596
    @mikehaberski4596 Před 18 dny

    Glad to see you revisiting this project👍

  • @YohTaiSai420
    @YohTaiSai420 Před 21 dnem

    I geek over aerodynamics in cars. This is no exception.

  • @Tubski.Ollie126
    @Tubski.Ollie126 Před 15 dny

    Imagine the ideal track. When you make the care smaller, everything else gets bigger. If everything was smooth, flat, and sticky, I'd love to see an rc car race of practically mini f1.

  • @Yellow_bud
    @Yellow_bud Před 22 dny +2

    Ay the car has returned!

  • @mgscheue
    @mgscheue Před 21 dnem

    I saw the 2J run at the Monterey Historics. The snowmobile engine and fans were really loud.

  • @coelhovinicius140
    @coelhovinicius140 Před 21 dnem

    It might be complicated, but the chaparral's fan car had the skirts somehow linked to the suspension so it stays in the right attitude, might help you with the consistency around the corners. There are so many details about those fan cars and active aero in general, have fun going down that rabbit hole!

  • @cjsnw
    @cjsnw Před 21 dnem

    Try using flat framing from nylon or teflon to keep the contact with ground.
    Keep that framing suspended from wheels using some impregnated fabric.
    Maybe even try using some sort of secondary thin short strips of fabric on the framing to compensate for smaller imperfections on the road.

  • @larrytemen4789
    @larrytemen4789 Před 21 dnem

    You should try brush for your ground affect set up. The use a bristle bush for sealing the bottom of garage doors etc. make the brush 1” thick the entire way around and that should work.

  • @demonic477
    @demonic477 Před 15 dny

    when the F1 engineers were trying to make the fan cars work the best material they found for the skirt s was aluminum or Lexan . they even tried using brushes but they where a lot heavier then the other option . the chaparral 2J was the fastest with it's floating skirt that worked with arms connected to the suspension to keep the skirt tight to the road. but trying to make this work on a model car would be a nightmare .

  • @darkphotonstudio
    @darkphotonstudio Před 22 dny

    Very cool! I’m surprised you didn’t mention the McMurtry Speirling fan car. It’s insanely fast and corners like it’s glued to the track, which it is, kind of.

  • @newmonengineering
    @newmonengineering Před 21 dnem

    Use a bicycle tube for the sealing membrane. Make the bottom slightly smaller than the top and use a Kevlar string to give the bottom a slight rigidity to it. Similar to a hovercraft design. The tube rubber can better deal with the roughness and the string on the bottom edge will coax it to maintain its shape better. Thats my suggestion for the skirt. Very decent results nonetheless.

  • @sigmaoctantis_nz
    @sigmaoctantis_nz Před 21 dnem

    Stiffening the suspension so much would have countered any gains in grip around corners. For grip you need compliance over bumps, which requires a more flexible skirt material to go with it. Additionally, with a solid skirt, the wheels will jump around when the skirt is contacting the ground, causing periods of a significant loss in downforce and making control difficult. I'd suggest something like a rubber sealing strip with a hollow center, similar to what is used to seal boots/bonnets in cars.

  • @Guru1ofatl
    @Guru1ofatl Před 19 dny

    With Can AM cars the skirt height was controlled by the suspension via cables and rockers. This allowed the suspension to do its job while maintaining the necessary skirt clearance.

  • @villep7907
    @villep7907 Před 20 dny +1

    Subscribed immediately, freaking awesome channel!
    Stuff made here with RC stuff!

  • @CappeSun
    @CappeSun Před 21 dnem

    Love the Wii Sports/Japan in a nutshell -font used in the past few videos

  • @jaydizzay
    @jaydizzay Před 21 dnem

    @Project-Air Have a look into Chaparral's solution for rough surfaces with the 2J, basically they mounted the skirts to the suspension components so the skirts rise and fall with the wheels rather than directly to the body

  • @TheBillzilla
    @TheBillzilla Před 21 dnem

    The trick is to mount the large alloy plate & edges off the bottom of the suspension uprights and not the chassis, so its height above the ground doesn't change.

  • @edutaimentcartoys
    @edutaimentcartoys Před 15 dny

    wow, super rc f1 car ...

  • @kmorris180
    @kmorris180 Před 21 dnem

    I always enjoy your videos and having Emily's input is wonderful. The gal seems to have a good head on her shoulders. What's next? Maybe a car that turns into a plane and flies with the assistance of rocket motors?

  • @Wheelz2Zero6
    @Wheelz2Zero6 Před 18 dny

    From the beginning, looking at your preview videos, I could see that the cornering test was going to be flawed because of the rocks and the uneven surface. It would be cool to see you try this again on a track surface that is smoother and figuring out the perfect ride height. Good job on the video

  • @rcmortyhobbies2567
    @rcmortyhobbies2567 Před 21 dnem

    It’s good to see engineering at work. Good stuff

  • @davidorbell5803
    @davidorbell5803 Před 21 dnem

    you will find like in the lotus 88 the skirts are connected to the suspension arms so the shirts always remain at a set point above the ground and that way you putting all the load to the tyres and not loosing ground effect in the suspension.

  • @user-co9xg4ey1o
    @user-co9xg4ey1o Před 19 dny

    when i first heard about this formula 1 car i had some ideas of my own but testing them on a life size car was never going to be in my price range so you have given me a good idea, thanks

  • @jomo2lps913
    @jomo2lps913 Před 21 dnem

    I love your Videos keep going on!!!

  • @giacomodallagiovanna5746

    Hi, I personally loved your F1 RC car project, so I'd like to give you some ideas: maybe you can add some sort of plank, like actual F1 Cars, to reduce the minimum distance from the ground of car's floor to avoid skirts damaging and maybe try some TPU 3D printed skirts to improve the vacuum effect. Have a good day!

  • @degreeless_engineering

    I would recommend attaching the skirts to the suspension so that it moves with the suspension rather than the chassis, but this is really sweet!

  • @karlsantos
    @karlsantos Před 8 dny

    After watching up to 13 minutes on this amazing video I recon the low pressure false floor should be connected to the wheel carriers instead of the chassis.
    That would allow a softer and grippier tune of the suspension and still maintain the seal to the ground, maybe?
    Williams used something like that in F1 in the early 80's.

  • @elitesennabubble
    @elitesennabubble Před 18 dny

    The F1 skirts they used were free floating or spring loaded - gravity/spring force meant that they were always sealing to the ground but without bottoming out the car or bouncing

  • @jimbobur
    @jimbobur Před 21 dnem +1

    4:19 3D printed fractal support trees 🌲🌲