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- May 14, 2018
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- Western Mass.
- Vehicle Year
- 1994
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- 3.0 V6
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- Manual
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- 225/70/R15
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- If it's not broken Don't Fix It!
@Maritime Drag Racing posted in What did you do to your Ranger today's thread that garnered a lot of attention and has has many of us thinking and posting. I am making this thread to continue the conversation without plugging up this thread.
Here is his post that has us all gossiping over:
Here is the jest of the conversation so far:
If you could get your hands on one of those large Movie fans you may be able to to do your suggestion with ribbons instead of driving a drag truck down the freeway. Just a thought that came to me while reading your post. These large fans can move air upwards of 100mph if not more though I have not looked into them recently so I'm just going off of memory (it's failed me recently so this may be the case here). This should be enough for your trick to work.
I know many drag trucks use an aluminum cover over the beds. This creates the air bubble that @sgtsandman was talking about right behind the cab minimizing the size of it and also minimizing the drag. They also use a large wing off the rear of the tailgate used for downforce that the air that is coming off the bubble hits and creates the down force. you still have drag right off of the rear of the truck but there is little you can do minimize this but I'm sure this is also figured into the rear wing geometry.
I have noticed the bulbus protrusion on the front of ships. Air flow is measured just like a liquid. So maybe a scale model of a truck could be inserted into a water tank to get an idea of the effect that the air would have on the wings. It would also show places where the air is unstable flowing over it. This would be cheaper than a Air Tunnel rental for sure.
Can Maritimes truck be made more aero dynamic with little to no cost?
I think your idea of the ribbons is the best option for a cheap way to play with the aero dynamics to see what could be done cheaply but the rules for the races he enters must be followed for those ideas to be worth anything.
Here is his post that has us all gossiping over:
Been told many times I should lower the Ranger but to me that's a hard NO - Why should I pay $844.50 CDN for DJM I-beams + $83.59 for the rear axle flip kit + $194.49 for new CalTrac flip plates(Total $1,122.58) and have it do NOTHING for my ET? That kind of $$ would buy a bunch more horsepower....
View attachment 119509
Here is the jest of the conversation so far:
Those people are probably thinking there might be some aerodynamic benefit to lowering. On a 1/8– or 1/4–mile track with the race over in seconds, that's unlikely.
I would tend to think that traction devices and horsepower improvements are the best bang for your buck.
There's not supposed to be any hard cornering in drag racing. So low CG is probably optional.
Yeah, I mean, I lowered my green Ranger, but it‘s a street toy, not a drag truck. Drag strip requires getting as much power as possible and transferring it as effectively as possible to the ground. Height matters little for that. Ripping around bends on the street, the lower you can get your COG and the stiffer you can get and wider, the better.
I must agree with your view on it at this point and the speeds you are achieving. Lowering would only help keep it more stable on the big end once you start hitting 160-180 mph. Lowering comes in when the air flow under the vehicle is enough to lift it up off of the ground surface making it squirrely at high speeds. Lowering does nothing for 60' and 330' speeds.
@Maritime Drag Racing
I don’t know anything about this stuff, but what I’m reading is that downforce is much more important than aerodynamic drag going through the wind. Generate the most horsepower, and push it to the ground as hard as possible.
Then, the theoretical side of my engineering brain knows that wind resistance becomes a real factor above 50 or 55 miles an hour and goes up exponentially, not linearly. With that in mind, and the speed you’re reaching, considering you’re trying to gain tenths or even hundredths of a second, looking into aerodynamics may make some sense for those extreme limits.
When I jumble that up in my common sense (which has been occasionally faulty in the past) and my shade tree fabrication and mechanical abilities (which have been occasionally faulty in the past), and my tendency to pinch pennies (which has occasionally led to faulty results in the past), what about this?
Could you put wings or ailerons on that truck to push it down in the wind? Wings on top, or wings on the bottom, or even stubby wings out the side? I know that sounds ridiculous, and I’m not exactly sure how to do it, But in my limited exposure to Indy cars, there are 100 places on the body that are curved or shaped to push it down.
Something underneath or along the open sides between the tires to pull it down?
My other thought regarding airflow. Is the tailgate on the truck and is it solid? I vaguely remember that the tailgate acts like a parachute when the wind comes over the cab. If it’s there, could you perforate it or could you louver it so it passes air?
And I’m not proposing doing major modifications to your truck on the chance it works out. If you can figure out what combination of these things might help, you could pick up a scrapyard tailgate and try, And maybe temporarily clamp on some fiberglass or aluminum sheet metal wingy contraptions to see if it works.
My two cents, hope it helps.
Don’t laugh at me, I’m at the age where I drive like a little old lady. If I don’t want to be bothered by other drivers at any given point, I just have to drive one of my town cars with a rain hat on, and everybody stays a mile away from me.
The tailgate does to a point. With enough speed, the air flow trapped by the tailgate causes an air bubble in the bed that acts like a fairing smoothing the flow so that the air only "sees" the height of the tailgate as far as drag effect goes.
Removing the tailgate eliminates that bubble and you get drag from the full height of the cab. So, he needs to keep the tailgate.
As far as the rest, if he has the factory rake, lifting from air going under the truck may not be an issue of concern. Adding wings for down force or valences under the truck may cause too much negatives due to drag, effecting performance as a result. Anything you stick into the air stream is going to cause drag and slow the vehicle down. So the benefits have to out weigh the negatives, as long as it is safe. Maritime Racing would know better on that than I and may have already looked in to it.
All understood. Like I said, when I started this, I don’t know much about it. I understand a lot of the engineering concepts, but there is also a common thing in engineering, that one test is worth 1 million assumptions. That’s what happened to the Challenger: if the foam comes off, it’s just foam, it won’t hurt anything.
I’m not being defensive here, as always I just try to be helpful. I do understand that these kinds of races are one by hundredths or thousandths of a second, so i’m just trying to provide some things that might be worth looking at.
I know @Maritime Drag Racing and all kinds of people have “done this” for years, but then there’s that one little thing you didn’t think of or look at that throws you to that next hundredth of a second, and you come with the blue ribbon.
I can think of a myriad things in life, serious stuff at work, that we had totally under control, and then somebody came up and said did you ever think of doing this? And history was made
At this point lets look at it in the money vs. time slip point of view.
Yes lowering a vehicle is worth it on the time slip, in general, BUT is it worth the same amount on the time slip vs. lets say a power adder? Which one can improve the time slip more for the same amount of money? This is racing, go as fast as you can, cheap as you can, at least for those on an out of pocket expense race team.
Until traction becomes an issue it is better to add horse power and torque till you can no longer put that power to the ground. This is when suspension and lowering come into play. Then you are right back at it again, more power till you can no longer get it to the ground... damn vicious circle it is but fun to play it.
Aero dynamics come in at the big end for the most part. This is where adding a bed cover and front and rear downforce wings come in. At speed these force the vehicle downward adding traction but at the cost of aero dynamics and drag. This to can help but also hurt. This is where more horse power needs to added to compensate for the loss of speed due to drag. Again a circle.
@Rick W They used to sell nets to replace tailgates that netted a couple MPG's but nothing that was that large so it went to the wayside. You can still get them but the savings were marginal at best in an on road application.Afterthought, again on aerodynamics, it might be worth trying the ribbon and wind trick. Get a five dollar roll of bright ribbon, a little duct tape, and do a pattern all over the truck with 6 inch ribbons. Then run it up to 60 or 70 miles an hour and get a video of it from the side.
If memory serves me correctly, ribbons running backward are good, ribbons running upward indicate an area where the truck is being lifted. Any ribbons pointing downward, etc. Limp ribbons aren’t problems, ribbons that are whipping are intense effects, etc.
I’m not trying to force my opinion on anybody, I don’t have an opinion because I don’t know much about this stuff. I come back to again, some inexpensive things that might be done.
I understand what @sgtsandman was saying about a pressure dome in the bed. could that be perfected? If you could measure the high and low spots of that? Would a few perforations high in the tailgate or low in the tailgate affect that? You could see what the effects are with just a sheet of plywood, put it in, drill a bunch of holes in it, and then selectively cover them with duct tape and see which outlets make a difference in the wind coming over the truck. Or maybe cover them from the outside with just masking tape, and see which holes blow out, blow the tape off. What about things like putting a little rounded filler between the cab and the bed? What about putting a bigger rounded panel in the front of the bed or in the back of the bed (to eliminate gaps and or square edges, perpendicular to the travel). You might be able to get away with some cardboard and duct tape and the ribbon test would just cost you a few gallons of gas.
All the ship builders in the world thought a pointed bow was the most streamlined. Then they did the underwater version of a ribbon test. Now all the ships have a hard on in the front that pushes through better.
Again, from the depths of my ignorance, just trying to tickle something that might make a difference, Or some things that might be cheap to try. It takes a lot of time and effort to save a half a second.

If you could get your hands on one of those large Movie fans you may be able to to do your suggestion with ribbons instead of driving a drag truck down the freeway. Just a thought that came to me while reading your post. These large fans can move air upwards of 100mph if not more though I have not looked into them recently so I'm just going off of memory (it's failed me recently so this may be the case here). This should be enough for your trick to work.
I know many drag trucks use an aluminum cover over the beds. This creates the air bubble that @sgtsandman was talking about right behind the cab minimizing the size of it and also minimizing the drag. They also use a large wing off the rear of the tailgate used for downforce that the air that is coming off the bubble hits and creates the down force. you still have drag right off of the rear of the truck but there is little you can do minimize this but I'm sure this is also figured into the rear wing geometry.
I have noticed the bulbus protrusion on the front of ships. Air flow is measured just like a liquid. So maybe a scale model of a truck could be inserted into a water tank to get an idea of the effect that the air would have on the wings. It would also show places where the air is unstable flowing over it. This would be cheaper than a Air Tunnel rental for sure.
Can Maritimes truck be made more aero dynamic with little to no cost?
I think your idea of the ribbons is the best option for a cheap way to play with the aero dynamics to see what could be done cheaply but the rules for the races he enters must be followed for those ideas to be worth anything.
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