pitot tubes on race cars

Brett Dikeman brett at cloud9.net
Thu Jul 22 12:40:10 EDT 2004


Out of curiosity, anyone know why a number of the prototype ALMS cars 
sported pitot tubes?  I've seen the same thing on pictures of F1 cars.

Sorta visible here if you click on the image for the larger version:
http://frank.mercea.net/zoph/photo.php?album_id=20&_off=8

(right in front of the headrest hump)

Oh, and much better visibility here:
http://frank.mercea.net/photos/cars/CRW_4399.jpg


Generally in aircraft they provide:
-speed indication
-vacuum (or pressure) for driving the gyros in an emergency

Neither seems terribly useful in a racecar with four perfectly good 
wheels to measure speed from(and an accelerometer to tell when 
there's wheelslip, for example).  If you need an artificial horizon 
gyro in a racecar, you're doing something wrong :-)

Only other thing I can think of is for measuring aerodynamics, but 
would one fixed point be all that useful?  Maybe a reference pressure 
for other ports along the car?(if so, they're well hidden!)

So I give up.  What's it for?  Google turned up nothing useful.

Brett
-- 
"They that give up essential liberty to obtain temporary
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Ben Franklin
http://www.users.cloud9.net/~brett/


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