ReklinedRider
Zen MBB Master
Was wondering about this just the other day....
What do you think of putting a single sheet of stiff plastic in the area under the boom and above the front tire? This would be in a plane that is perpendicular to the ground (so it would be vertical) and would be in line with the bike from front to back. It would effectively stop air flow from going back and forth (in the left and right direction) under the boom. But would it have an aerodynamic advantage?Jim Parker wrapped a rear V triangle with plastic sheeting and he has not published anything further.
My guess is that there is no advantage... and here's why.
I have experimented a lot with fairing round tubes and round tubing responds well to fairing.
Those tubes on the rear of the V are already aerodynamic; adding skin surface area in an attempt
to fair faired tubing only adds surface area.
More surface area adds more parasitic drag and is more fun in cross-winds.
What does help a bit, especially with those rear wheel covers, is adding a splitter
between the wheel and the spine of the bike's frame.
Search for photos of the very first Vendetta and you'll see a small aluminum splitter
welded in the spot I'm talking about.
You will still be a bit more sensitive to side winds with the splitter added to the wheel cover's area.
I accept donations... thank you, thank you very much.
-Steve
Search for photos of the very first Vendetta
Try it!What do you think of putting a single sheet of stiff plastic in the area under the boom and above the front tire? This would be in a plane that is perpendicular to the ground (so it would be vertical) and would be in line with the bike from front to back. It would effectively stop air flow from going back and forth (in the left and right direction) under the boom. But would it have an aerodynamic advantage?
As a follow up I have tested my vendetta with the rear triangle fairing and rear wheel disc. I used a garmin vector 2 pedal power meter. To my surprise my vendetta is much faster without the rear fairing and rear wheel disc.
This was my result on a 14 mile loop from my house:
With fairing and wheel disc: 18.4 mph ave. @ 118 watts ave.
Without fairing or wheel disc: 19.1 mph ave. @ 113 watts ave.
By my calculation, I'm a full 1 mph faster at 100 watts power without the cool looking stuff.
Holey moley!As a follow up I have tested my vendetta with the rear triangle fairing and rear wheel disc. I used a garmin vector 2 pedal power meter. To my surprise my vendetta is much faster without the rear fairing and rear wheel disc.
This was my result on a 14 mile loop from my house:
With fairing and wheel disc: 18.4 mph ave. @ 118 watts ave.
Without fairing or wheel disc: 19.1 mph ave. @ 113 watts ave.
By my calculation, I'm a full 1 mph faster at 100 watts power without the cool looking stuff.
Heck at this rate try it without a rear wheel.
These are two different arrangements you can try next if you have the time, one with just the rear disk and the other with open fairing bottom to help identify the main source of additional drag. You can also test fairing (both versions) with standard rear wheel if you haven't already tried it.(I have two questions: first did you try the disk wheel alone without fairing; secondly, is the fairing covered underneath or only the sides? Sorry if this was mentioned already and I missed the information.)
No to the first and yes (underneath) to the second.