What you posted a photo of is proven to work like you said. Tilting in like that would not have been practical on my build. My understanding is that the point is to break the vaccum created by the flat back. I believe mine will still do that, just less well. A boat tail shape would be a lot better, but to really be a boat tail all sides would have to meet at a point and have a less steep angle. I think this is just to break the vaccumAguyfromohio wrote:Those tail fairings are proven to work when tested by groups like the Trucking Research Institute and the US Dept of Energy.
For big class 8 trucks at highway speeds they improve fuel economy at least 1%, maybe as much as 4%.
Notice in the photo that they taper just a bit - that's what does the magic to reduce drag.
Some of the photos above look like the extensions are straight back parallel to the walls and roof.
A straight tail fairing like that would not help at all, it has to taper to create a sort of boat tail.
Actually hes right, your system actually would do nothing if not have a negative effect. Your not breaking up the rear pressures at all, actually creating a void. Yes the angles and rounded corners are hugely important up front. But at best you currently have nothing more than a square back with a big void for turbulence to form.dancam wrote:What you posted a photo of is proven to work like you said. Tilting in like that would not have been practical on my build. My understanding is that the point is to break the vaccum created by the flat back. I believe mine will still do that, just less well. A boat tail shape would be a lot better, but to really be a boat tail all sides would have to meet at a point and have a less steep angle. I think this is just to break the vaccumAguyfromohio wrote:Those tail fairings are proven to work when tested by groups like the Trucking Research Institute and the US Dept of Energy.
For big class 8 trucks at highway speeds they improve fuel economy at least 1%, maybe as much as 4%.
Notice in the photo that they taper just a bit - that's what does the magic to reduce drag.
Some of the photos above look like the extensions are straight back parallel to the walls and roof.
A straight tail fairing like that would not help at all, it has to taper to create a sort of boat tail.
Mine also doubles as a place to get out of the rain when your trying to get into the trailer though. It was a big pain to make so i really hope its worth it :/ have yet to test.
I believe there is sort of a minimum length for it to work as well. Airtabs are another thing to look into but are more for crosswinds i believe
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tony.latham wrote:I have not played with this, but you can run your own wind tunnel tests online. It's free.
http://www.flowillustrator.com/
I'd make sure you upload a photo that includes your tow vehicle.
Let us know what your pickup on.
Tony
It is a bit relative. For example in post #6 working on it said he sees no milage difference with his big truck between pulling his trailer and not pulling one. No amount of aero mods to just the trailer will change that. However if you put the exact same trailer behind a smaller and more fuel efficent tow vehicle that (to make an extreme example) that can barely pull it aero mods will make a huge difference.GuitarPhotog wrote:Remember that 1% improvement is a big deal to big truckers who put thousands of miles and hundreds of thousands of gallons of fuel in their trucks. You won't notice a 1% or even a 5% improvement in your mileage unless you log every mile and every type of terrain.
<Chas>
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