Fuelly Forums

Fuelly Forums (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/)
-   General Fuel Topics (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/f8/)
-   -   Tool for visualizing aero vs rolling resistance (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/f8/tool-for-visualizing-aero-vs-rolling-resistance-1802.html)

krousdb 03-18-2006 06:33 AM

Tool for visualizing aero vs rolling resistance
 
I have developed a spreadsheet that shows the contribution of aero drag and tire rolling resistance versus speed. I used the formula in the last post to this thread:

https://www.gassavers.org/forum_topic...reduction.html

Just enter your values (numbers in blue) and it will calculate aero and RR and also will calculate a theoretical MPG. Of course there may be an error in the calcs, but the MPG numbers seem to make sense. One caveat is the ICE efficiency. I set it up to show the same efficiency at all speeds which is not an accurate representation of reality. you can enter a separate efficiency for each speed to be more accurate, although it is really just a guess.

Anyway the point is not to calculate MPG, but rather to see how your CD and tire RR contribute to total drag at a given speed. You can simulate weight reduction, change in frontal area, CD and tire RR. Maybe it can help figure out the best place to spend your time/money.

Now if only I could figure out how to host a spreadsheet. Here is a jpg anyway...
https://img99.imageshack.us/img99/398...adsheet3ls.jpg
https://img206.imageshack.us/img206/4598/aerovsrr6yp.jpg

SVOboy 03-18-2006 09:00 AM

Email it to me and I'll host
 
Email it to me and I'll host it or talk to Matt and he can prolly host it also. Looks very much on the cool side, can't wait to play with it, thanks a bunch, :)

Matt Timion 03-18-2006 09:45 AM

What I like about this is
 
What I like about this is that it shows target areas based on what you want to accomplish. For example, if you primarily drive around town, (under 35mph) you are better off getting LRR tires. If you drive over 35mph on a regular basis, aerodynamic modifications will yield the best results.

krousdb 03-18-2006 10:27 AM

SVOBoy is hosting it here.
 
SVOBoy is hosting it here. I'm sure that it can be improved upon.

https://www.geocities.com/frontsidesk8er/delsolaero.xls

A few more bits of info.

The CRR number is tire RR plus other mechanical losses. The 0.008 value is a good guess for LRR tires at 40 PSI based on the thread I referred to earlier. The CD and FA should be available on google for your car. The default fuel value is for summer fuel, 114,500 BTU converted to Watt hours. Winter fuel is 112,500 BTU and E85 is 80,000 BTU. Just google the BTU to kWh conversion to get the appropriate number to plug in.

The MPG figures are just based on the fuel energy content times the efficiency of the engine. The fuel value is well known but the engine efficiency changes based on RPM I would guess. The engine efficiency should be the highest and fairly flat between the torque and HP peaks. Based on my 55 MPH testing last week, a 26% efficiency with winter fuel gives me 57 MPG at 55 MPH, which is about what I got in my testing. The efficiency number sounds high, which might be an indication that the CD is lower than .378 or that the highway hypermiling technique, 50 - 60 MPH, accel down hill, bleed off up hill, effectively increases the engine efficiency.

As a comparison, I plugged in the weight, CD and FA for SVOBoy's Torino Rex and got 70 MPG at 55 MPH, 13 MPG better than with the Del Sol. :(


MetroMPG 03-18-2006 10:48 AM

awesome spreadsheet -
 
awesome spreadsheet - thanks. this is crying out to be made into a web page form. javascript anyone?

too bad it doesn't include a temperature variable which would show its effect on drag numbers (both aero and tire/mechanical).

SVOboy 03-18-2006 10:57 AM

Quote:awesome spreadsheet -
 
Quote:

awesome spreadsheet - thanks. this is crying out to be made into a web page form. javascript anyone?
I'll try my hand with some java later.

And dan, sorry about the whole my car being a more efficient base thing, I'm sure I'll find a way to make it get bad gas mileage still.

MetroMPG 03-18-2006 11:00 AM

i'll make this up into a
 
i'll fire this into a coldfusion page later on today too. but right now i'm going outside to play with my forklift while it's still light out.

(no motorectomies today - we broke the jack handle! but there's other stuff i can still take apart...)

krousdb 03-18-2006 11:26 AM

Re: awesome spreadsheet -
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MetroMPG
awesome spreadsheet - thanks. this is crying out to be made into a web page form. javascript anyone?

too bad it doesn't include a temperature variable which would show its effect on drag numbers (both aero and tire/mechanical).

Well actually with a little work we can. The RHO value has to do with the density of air at sealevel. Some googling should give us different numbers to plug in as they relate to temp and altitude. No time right now, maybe I will try later.

Matt Timion 03-18-2006 12:39 PM

If you make this into a web
 
If you make this into a web based spreadsheet I'll happily host it here. I've been thinking of adding a section of the site for "online tools." This would be perfect for such an area.

MetroMPG 03-18-2006 06:33 PM

https://metrompg.com/tool-aero-rr.htm

i left out (in the output) some of the fields that are constants. still need to add some form field / table column descriptions, credits & links.

feedback ?

Matt Timion 03-18-2006 07:16 PM

Re:
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MetroMPG
https://metrompg.com/tool-aero-rr.htm

i left out some of the fields that are constants. still need to add some form field / table column descriptions, credits & links.

feedback ?

Looks good to me. What was it written in? Java? Any chance you want to give me the source code so I can post it up here? Credit will be given, of course.

MetroMPG 03-19-2006 05:16 AM

it's coldfusion. i was
 
it's coldfusion. i was going to do a javascript version, but i'm faster with CF (though javascript would have had a portability advantage). i can zip the file and PM you a link to download it. you can translate it to php or whatever suits you.

but let's just wait for a bit of feedback first. no point in both of us revising the same code at the same time.

also, i should compare the formulas used against another set i've seen.

krousdb 03-19-2006 05:18 AM

Re:
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MetroMPG
https://metrompg.com/tool-aero-rr.htm

i left out some of the fields that are constants. still need to add some form field / table column descriptions, credits & links.

feedback ?

If you are so inclined, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_of_air

FE increases as the density of air decreases which happens with increasing temperature, increasing humidity, increasing elevation and decreasing barometric pressure. I could have figured this out 15 years ago but my brain hurts when I look at it now. At least there is a table of density vs temp. You could try to fit a curve to it if you can't figure out the formula.

MetroMPG 03-19-2006 03:27 PM

Quote:If you are so
 
Quote:

If you are so inclined...
well, i was *partially* inclined.

i updated the tool with the table data from wikipedia, so you can select from a range of pre-calculated rho (air density) values based on various temperatures. the table doesn't specify the other values used in the rho calculations, but i suspect they used "standard" values for pressure & water vapour content (humidity).

https://metrompg.com/tool-aero-rr.htm

while roaming around the web reading about this, i came across a very interesting page which actually does the rho calculation (javascript) from input values of air temp, absolute pressure, and humidity.

most interestingly, it then takes that info and calculates *relative engine HP*.

since our cars' engine hp figures are calculated by SAE rules at standardized atmospheric conditions, this tool shows the effects on HP of different atmospheric conditions (as they affect density of the intake charge).

Quote:

For the SAE J1349 relative horsepower calculations, the standard reference conditions are: Air temp 77 deg F (25 deg C), 29.235 Inches- Hg (990 mb) actual pressure and 0% relative humidity.
https://wahiduddin.net/calc/calc_hp_abs.htm

krousdb 03-19-2006 03:45 PM

Nice, I suspect standard
 
Nice, I suspect standard pressure and humidity values also. The temp selection works just fine the way it is. I think you might want to mention that this calculator is primarily for calculating aero drag and rolling resistance. The MPG calc is subject to lots of speculation about how one calculates ICE efficiency. MPG figures should be taken with a grain of salt. I backed into a 26% efficiency based on the highway testing I did at 55 MPH. At 26% that is very high compared to the 13% figure that I have seen for modern ICEs. But maybe the 13% is for normal driving through a whole tank, not at a constant speed.

MetroMPG 03-19-2006 04:29 PM

agreed - it needs to be
 
agreed - it needs to be fleshed out with disclaimers, variable desrcriptions, links to relevant info & credits.

added one more feature: a quick select for summer / winter fuel energy densities.

note that the temperature calculation doesn't have an effect on rolling resistance, where in real life it would (tire rr decreases as temp increases). the temp calc on my page only affects aero drag.

i have a couple of other simple additions in mind. i'll do them tomorrow.

MetroMPG 03-19-2006 04:39 PM

one other thing i noticed in
 
one other thing i noticed in the spreadsheet formula: tire drag is unchanging at all speeds (vehicle mass * CRR * gravity constant), but doesn't rolling resistance increase with speed?

(EDIT: my mistake; the spreadsheed doesn't show this; see below.)

i was looking at other sites, and saw this formula for HP to overcome tire/mechanical drag. it's more precise, and varies with speed:

Quote:

HP= V/375 times[0.01184 W + 0.000353(V-66)W].

Velocity V is in miles per hour,Weight W is in pounds.If your speed
is below 66-mph,then the second term within the parenthesis falls
out.Again,to get flywheel power, take your result and divide by
0.95. This yields Bhp the engine or electric motor must provide to the
powertrain, at 95% mechanical efficiency for the powertrain.
it would be nice to have a way to play with head/tail winds on the page as well. it shouldn't be too hard to revise the formula. i'll think about that a bit tomorrow as well - unless someone wants to jump in before then :)

krousdb 03-20-2006 01:33 AM

Yes, rolling resistance
 
Yes, rolling resistance should increase with speed. Column U on the spreadsheet clearly shows that it does. The formula used was posted here by someone else and I cannot conform the tire resistance part. By all means, if you have found a better formula, you should use it.

Calculating the effect of a DIRECT headwind or tailwind would be easy, just add/subtract the windspeed to the aero part only. Calculating winds at other directions than 0 degrees and 180 degrees involves the side area of the vehicle and is much more complicated to do, if at all.

Matt Timion 03-20-2006 05:30 AM

Re: Yes, rolling resistance
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by krousdb
Calculating the effect of a DIRECT headwind or tailwind would be easy, just add/subtract the windspeed to the aero part only. Calculating winds at other directions than 0 degrees and 180 degrees involves the side area of the vehicle and is much more complicated to do, if at all.

ACtually this is very easy to do as well. All that we would be doing is solving for an unknown side of a triangle, which is pretty simple trigonometry.

MetroMPG 03-20-2006 07:21 AM

you're right krousdb. if
 
you're right krousdb. if you remove aero drag from the picture (by setting column M values to zero), you can see HP Tires continues to increase with speed. my bad.

when i compared the two different formulas for rolling drag, you get these figures:

MPH - HP TIRES (orig. formula) - HP TIRES (diff. formula)

05 - 0.261422561 - 0.398304667
10 - 0.522845122 - 0.796609333
15 - 0.784267683 - 1.194914
20 - 1.045690244 - 1.593218667
25 - 1.307112805 - 1.991523333
30 - 1.568535366 - 2.389828
35 - 1.829957927 - 2.788132667
40 - 2.091380489 - 3.186437333
45 - 2.352803050 - 3.584742
50 - 2.614225611 - 3.983046667
55 - 2.875648172 - 4.381351333
60 - 3.137070733 - 4.779656
65 - 3.398493294 - 5.177960667

the difference is consistent: 52% more drag in the 2nd formula at all speeds. maybe it reflects the difference between LRR tires and non-LRR tires.

if you want, you can enter a column with the new formula in Row 2: =A2/375*(0.01184*B2 + 0.000353*B2)

(it applies only up to 65 mph. for some reason, rolling resistance as calculated in the second formula is set to increase above 66 mph. i'll see if i can find out more about it.)

krousdb 03-20-2006 07:28 AM

Re: Yes, rolling resistance
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Matt Timion
Quote:

Originally Posted by krousdb
Calculating the effect of a DIRECT headwind or tailwind would be easy, just add/subtract the windspeed to the aero part only. Calculating winds at other directions than 0 degrees and 180 degrees involves the side area of the vehicle and is much more complicated to do, if at all.

ACtually this is very easy to do as well. All that we would be doing is solving for an unknown side of a triangle, which is pretty simple trigonometry.

OK, and how do you find the CD and area for the side of your vehicle? That data is not published, nor is it measured that I know of.

MetroMPG 03-20-2006 07:30 AM

Quote:ACtually this is very
 
Quote:

ACtually this is very easy to do as well. All that we would be doing is solving for an unknown side of a triangle, which is pretty simple trigonometry.
i think what krousdb was getting at is crosswinds have additional effects beyond just figuring out the new apparent windspeed and adding it on to the vehicle speed. (calculating "apparent wind" using true wind and vehicle speed is common for sailing, using vectors.)

e.g. rolling resistance changes in a crosswind (but not in a tail/head/no wind). in a crosswind the tires scrub (you have to counter steer against the wind), and the amount of scrub depends on the particular aerodynamics of the vehicle (and the cross wind strength/direction)

krousdb 03-20-2006 07:33 AM

Re: you're right krousdb. if
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MetroMPG
you're right krousdb. if you remove aero drag from the picture (by setting column M values to zero), you can see HP Tires continues to increase with speed. my bad.

when i compared the two different formulas for rolling drag, you get these figures:

MPH - HP TIRES (orig. formula) - HP TIRES (diff. formula)

05 - 0.261422561 - 0.398304667
10 - 0.522845122 - 0.796609333
15 - 0.784267683 - 1.194914
20 - 1.045690244 - 1.593218667
25 - 1.307112805 - 1.991523333
30 - 1.568535366 - 2.389828
35 - 1.829957927 - 2.788132667
40 - 2.091380489 - 3.186437333
45 - 2.352803050 - 3.584742
50 - 2.614225611 - 3.983046667
55 - 2.875648172 - 4.381351333
60 - 3.137070733 - 4.779656
65 - 3.398493294 - 5.177960667

the difference is consistent: 52% more drag in the 2nd formula at all speeds. maybe it reflects the difference between LRR tires and non-LRR tires.

if you want, you can enter a column with the new formula in Row 2: =A2/375*(0.01184*B2 + 0.000353*B2)

(it applies only up to 65 mph. for some reason, rolling resistance as calculated in the second formula is set to increase above 66 mph. i'll see if i can find out more about it.)

Perhaps the RR increases over 65 MPH to reflect additional downward force due to aero drag which manifests itself as additional weight?

MetroMPG 03-20-2006 07:38 AM

Re: you're right krousdb. if
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by krousdb
Perhaps the RR increases over 65 MPH to reflect additional downward force due to aero drag which manifests itself as additional weight?

i thought of that too, but then i think i've heard that most non-racing cars produce lift, not downforce, at highway speeds. which would mean a *lessening* of rr from reduced apparent weight. i'll look into this and get back.

Matt Timion 03-20-2006 07:58 AM

Re: Yes, rolling resistance
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by krousdb
OK, and how do you find the CD and area for the side of your vehicle? That data is not published, nor is it measured that I know of.

IN that case, it's not easy.

JanGeo 03-20-2006 08:07 AM

side wind
 
Ignore the side forces of the wind and just deal with the cosine of the angle times the wind velocity which gives you the frontal effects vector.

Matt Timion 03-20-2006 08:20 AM

Re: side wind
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JanGeo
Ignore the side forces of the wind and just deal with the cosine of the angle times the wind velocity which gives you the frontal effects vector.

That's actually exactly what I was thinking. An angled wind will just produce less of a frontal wind. I'm thinking that maybe all that can be done is ignore the side wind forces as it is impossible to really calculate.

krousdb 03-20-2006 08:57 AM

Re: side wind
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Matt Timion
Quote:

Originally Posted by JanGeo
Ignore the side forces of the wind and just deal with the cosine of the angle times the wind velocity which gives you the frontal effects vector.

That's actually exactly what I was thinking. An angled wind will just produce less of a frontal wind. I'm thinking that maybe all that can be done is ignore the side wind forces as it is impossible to really calculate.

A physicist friend of mine has developed a calculator for Prius MPG. As it turns out, crosswinds cause more drag than headwinds:

https://privatenrg.com/Crosswinds.htm#Crosswinds

The 70/30 rule is also interesting.
https://privatenrg.com/index.htm#WindAssistScreen

See all of his Prius related info here:
https://privatenrg.com/

JanGeo 03-20-2006 09:06 AM

CD
 
Actually I have heard that you can ignore the CD Drag Coeffient at lower speeds (under 100mph) as it is such a small portion of the rolling resistance and frontal area drag as to not matter much. Hard to say without testing further - maybe a few foam shapes held out the window of a moving car on a spring scale (a poor mans wind tunnel) will test the drag effects at various speeds.

Took the xB out for some highway miles yesterday after I gggggggassed it up OUCH! glad I pay after I pump because I didn't expect it to take $25 to fill it up yikes - really should have filled it last week for a few bucks less. Anyway I was on a long down hill and pushed the pedal down and the gps registered 86.3mph in just a few seconds from 60mph. On the tight on-ramp coming back I opened it up in third to about 5500 rpm and then hit 4th for a little more then dropped it into 5th as the cars behind me started getting smaller - man this box really moves out! Kills the mileage for the day however only about 43mpg. HA HA HA HA HA was getting used to the high 40's.

MetroMPG 03-20-2006 09:46 AM

Re: side wind
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by krousdb
A physicist friend of mine has developed a calculator for Prius MPG. As it turns out, crosswinds cause more drag than headwinds:

this makes sense when you think about it. vehicles are not at all aerodynamically optimized to be travelling "sideways" through the wind.

MetroMPG 03-20-2006 09:55 AM

Re: CD
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JanGeo
Actually I have heard that you can ignore the CD Drag Coeffient at lower speeds (under 100mph) as it is such a small portion of the rolling resistance and frontal area drag as to not matter much.

100 mph? (hopefully i'm misunderstanding your point. you're not saying that aero drag is unimportant below 100, are you?)

have a look at the spreadsheet or the web page and you'll see the aero penalty begins to rear its ugly head relative to rolling resistance at between 30-35 MPH.

https://metrompg.com/tool-aero-rr.htm

below that speed you burn most of your fuel to overcome rolling & mechanical drag.

above 35 mph, you burn most of your fuel fighting a losing battle against aerodynamic drag.

(a "losing" battle because the amount of fuel needed to overcome aero drag quadruples as speed doubles.)

JanGeo 03-20-2006 12:27 PM

YEs you hAvE
 
Yes you have misunderstood - the drag coefficient is the factor of the streamlineness of the shape i.e. square box vs teardrop but that has only a small influence on the aerodynamic drag - the more important factors are frontal area first and rolling resistance due to weight second. This is why the really fast sportcars are very small and low to the ground, pointy or not they only go fast because of their small frontal area and a few extra HP as well of course. Once you get up over 150mph then the shape becomes more important as well as surface treatment.

krousdb 03-20-2006 12:54 PM

Re: YEs you hAvE
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JanGeo
Yes you have misunderstood - the drag coefficient is the factor of the streamlineness of the shape i.e. square box vs teardrop but that has only a small influence on the aerodynamic drag - the more important factors are frontal area first and rolling resistance due to weight second. This is why the really fast sportcars are very small and low to the ground, pointy or not they only go fast because of their small frontal area and a few extra HP as well of course. Once you get up over 150mph then the shape becomes more important as well as surface treatment.

The formula for calculating drag contradicts what you are saying. CD*A*RHO/2*V^2. The CD and frontal area are EQUAL factors. Since they are multiplied by each other, you could decrease either by a certain percentage with the same results. Also, since aero drag increases at the rate of velocity squared, both CD and FA are much much much more significant than rolling resistance at speeds over 40MPH.

kickflipjr 03-20-2006 03:41 PM

I am taking a statistics
 
I am taking a statistics class in college right now. I think you guys could teach the class.


JanGeo 03-21-2006 06:43 AM

drag drag drag
 
Apparently the equations are not as simple as one is led to believe according to one site I found. I will have to go back to my college days when I modeled hp vs speed for cars and got some good results with a basic equation. Found some Cd for various cars on line also.

referring to the classic equation . . .
https://hypertextbook.com/physics/matter/drag/

R = .5 Cd roe A v^2

"Simple, compact, wonderful. A nice equation to work with -- or is it?

Well, yes and no.

Yes, but it works only as long as the range of conditions examined is "small". That is, no large variations in speed, viscosity, or crazy angles of attack. The way around this is to reduce the coefficient of drag to a variable rather than a constant. (I can live with this.) Cd depends on some yet to be specified set of factors. It is totally acceptable to say that Cd varies with this that or the other quantity according to any set of rules determined by experiment.
No, since speed is squared. [Gasp!] Recall that speed is the derivative of distance with respect to time. Have you ever tried to solve a nonlinear differential equation? No? Well, welcome to hell. Wait, let me rephrase that -- Welcome to Hell! [Ca-rack! Boom!] Ah ha ha ha ha haaaa! [Rumble] You fool! No one can manage the square of a derivative. The mathematics will consume you. [Ca-rack! Boom!] Ah ha ha ha ha haaaa! [Rumble]
Whew. What the hell wasthat all about? I might not know how to solve every kind of differential equation off the top of my head, but so what. I can always look for the solution in a book of standard mathematical tables or an on-line equivalent."

MetroMPG 03-21-2006 07:40 AM

Re: drag drag drag
 
Quote:

Yes, but it works only as long as the range of conditions examined is "small". That is, no large variations in speed, viscosity, or crazy angles of attack.
fortunately, using the equation to figure out drag for a road vehicle, there is no variation in viscosity or crazy angles of attack. so we don't have to worry about the writer's concern over those variables.

so we're left considering the writer's concern over the "large variation" of speed. and with no definition of what a "large variation" is, it's not a particularly useful point to have raised. (is 30-70 mph through air considered a "large variation"?)

i don't think the utility of the equation is seriously in doubt for the application we're looking at.

thisisntjared 03-21-2006 07:43 AM

Re: CD
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MetroMPG
https://metrompg.com/tool-aero-rr.htm

great tool man! took me a while to figure out the general area of my engines efficiency. unfortunately this also assumes the engines efficiency is constant throughout the rpms. still very cool though!

JanGeo 03-21-2006 08:58 AM

back to college
 
I will get the old punch cards out of the box from my college days and bring in the equation that I used for my Rambler which pretty much nailed my top speed dead on. It took into effect weight frontal area and drag cooefficient and yields either HP or speed in MPH.

MetroMPG 03-21-2006 09:39 AM

punch cards!! i caught the
 
punch cards!! i caught the very tail end of the punch card era:

my very first computer class in high school was about the last year it used cards (the pencil-in-the-boxes kind). at that time my "PC" was a Commodore 64 :)

yes, if you can decipher the cards, i'd be interested in seeing another version of the equation.

GasSavers_brick 03-21-2006 05:33 PM

Results look good...
 
I did a spreasheet a week or so ago that does essentially the same calculation and my results agree with yours. ~40mph is the point where rolling resistance becomes secondary and air resistance takes over. This also agrees with my informal observations with the scangauge. On a nice flat road I can get some really crazy instantaneous FE numbers when I'm driving between 35 and maybe 42mph, 35mph being the slowest I can reasonably cruise in fifth gear. After that my numbers decrease from 40-50mpg+ to the high thirties and down.



All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:08 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.