That Bernie is some
guy. From what I understand about the
topic , I agree with Bernie regarding the 7.5 deg angle and wind
tunnels. The characteristics of the core of the radiator does indeed
have an effect on the diffusion process through its resistance to air
flow. Seeing the tuffs from Bernie's radiator would appear to indicate
he is getting decent air flow (at least at low velocities). Again, as I
have mentioned several times, if you have sufficient air mass flow through
your core, you WILL cool. However, you could at the same
time also incurr large cooling drag.
The difference between an adequate cooling
system and a great cooling system (both keep the engine from meltdown) is the
amount of cooling drag. That is where careful attention to ducts,
diffusers, exit and cooling core characteristcs comes to play.
Clearly a system that fails to cool the engine
is inadequate. Keep in mind you could have the best duct design,
diffuser pressure recovery, etc, all optimized - BUT, if you radiator is
too small for the BTUs you need to reject then the system will fail to cool
you engine.
Ed Anderson