Modern aerodynamic cars like the Prius have very smooth well controlled tail wakes. Yes there is some turbulence and a vacuum zone, but it surprisingly small, and shrinks fast behind the vehicle. Any TD trailer towed by a Prius, or similar, will be parting allot of wind. A vehicle like a Jeep will have a large tail wake zone and it will be very turbulent in it's wake. For a TD towed by one of them in still air or a perfectly aligned head or tail wind, there is no need. Unfortunately rarely is a vehicle operating in those conditions. Often there is some degree of cross wind. That means the outer edge of the front of the upwind side, and the whole up wind side, of the trailer will be in clean or minimally to moderately disturbed air. In my opinion it is well worth it to do some streamlining, even if pulled by a brick. When you finally trade that brick in for a more streamlined vehicle, it will pay off even more.PaulC wrote:Your trailer will be traveling in dirty air all the time it is behind your vehicle.
Vortex generators is another option, but there is still a limit to the length of gap they can help with. http://www.airtab.com/main.html NASA even likes and uses them on it's trucks. In the transition zone from TV to trailer they work by creating a small amount of drag from the vortexes which creates an air curtail wall which prevents a large amount of drag from air sneaking it's way between the TV and trailer.PaulC wrote:The best way to get better fuel efficiency is to have as small a gap as possible between both. If you can design a sleeve arrangement that fits onto the TV and the Trailer you will achieve the best efficiency.
citylights wrote:Aerodynamic shape is a trade off between difficult construction, additional materials, and functional use. A standard tear shape is a nice compromise between those. Your sketches go more extreme shape and have great "cool factor" and likely better aerodynamic, but are not nearly as practical. When you layout, bed, galley, cabinets, storage, electrical, you will have a difficult time fitting it all.
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