Front Splitter
Discussion
I didn't realise my front splitter was missing until I had one fitted. The difference was noticeable above 70mph (track day obviously) and the car immediately felt more stable when changing lanes on a DC or M'way. I also noticed engine temperature was lower than previous so perhaps the splitter helps cold airflow around the engine bay as well ?
I'm having a new one fitted at the service MOT session in early March as I didn't see the pothole the other side of a speed bump a few weeks ago and the thing was ripped off
I'm having a new one fitted at the service MOT session in early March as I didn't see the pothole the other side of a speed bump a few weeks ago and the thing was ripped off
You don't need to worry about technology here, on the road the effects of wind direction, other cars disturbing air flow, road surface and the varying hight of the front of the car means it is impossible to design the perfect solution. All you need is an air dam to force air to stall in front of the underbody. This produces a pressure wave that pushes oncoming air to the sides. The effect is to reduce underbody air pressure and as an added bonus it reduces bonnet bounce too.
Just be sure to mount it facing forward. I've seen some the other way round and I believe that would create front end lift
Just be sure to mount it facing forward. I've seen some the other way round and I believe that would create front end lift
Yex 450 said:
I'm having a new one fitted at the service MOT session in early March as I didn't see the pothole the other side of a speed bump a few weeks ago and the thing was ripped off
Hi Ian, how's life? Is Dan fitting that for you? What exactly does it look like? Do you have a photo please? Sorry, that's a lot of questions in a single line!
debaron said:
Thanks bob father - I do appreciate that the ally strip method would work - but my car is a little lower than most so it just wouldn't last!
Also do like the look of a tasteful 'proper' splitter
Okay so now there's a new element to this. The wishbones are unequal length so that the camber angle alters as the suspension is loaded and unloaded. This ensures the tyres maximise contact patch regardless of loading when cornering. The basic alignment has the wishbones horizontal at rest allowing the camber to change one way in compression and the other when unloaded. If your car is lowered then your wishbones will not be horizontal at rest and this will have changed your front and rear camber angles. Assuming you've had your alignment adjusted to compensate for lowering this means that your suspension camber angle is not acting in the right direction when unloaded. Also do like the look of a tasteful 'proper' splitter
I'd advise you get your camber working right by correctly aligning your wishbones before worrying about a splitter
bobfather said:
You don't need to worry about technology here, on the road the effects of wind direction, other cars disturbing air flow, road surface and the varying hight of the front of the car means it is impossible to design the perfect solution. All you need is an air dam to force air to stall in front of the underbody. This produces a pressure wave that pushes oncoming air to the sides. The effect is to reduce underbody air pressure and as an added bonus it reduces bonnet bounce too.
Just be sure to mount it facing forward. I've seen some the other way round and I believe that would create front end lift
Interestingly, Cerb ones face the other way, but achieve exactly the same... it's not an 'aerofoil' in the true sense that would create lift or otherwise, it is merely a 'spoiler' that stalls (spoils) the airflow. Angle, direction and section are all unimportant, a 2"x2" block of pine would work just as well Just be sure to mount it facing forward. I've seen some the other way round and I believe that would create front end lift
I just used an air deflector from a Ford C Max. Made of plastic so when you hit speed bumps it doesn't get torn off or damage the car. Its about the right length and I fitted it using the socket headed screws and anchors that Ford use to fit the engine undertrays with. Line it up, mark the holes then drill a hole big enough to just accept the anchors (like Rawlplugs). Cost about £18 all in.
The air dam:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Genuine-Ford-C-Max-MK-I...
The fixings are shown here but I just ordered mine at the Ford dealer. You will have enough here for 5 or 6 dams!
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/20x-Engine-Undertray-Co...
The air dam:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Genuine-Ford-C-Max-MK-I...
The fixings are shown here but I just ordered mine at the Ford dealer. You will have enough here for 5 or 6 dams!
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/20x-Engine-Undertray-Co...
pb450 said:
Yex 450 said:
I'm having a new one fitted at the service MOT session in early March as I didn't see the pothole the other side of a speed bump a few weeks ago and the thing was ripped off
Hi Ian, how's life? Is Dan fitting that for you? What exactly does it look like? Do you have a photo please? Sorry, that's a lot of questions in a single line!
The splitter on my car will look exactly like the one posted by Bobfather a little way up the thread. As stated it does not have to look good, just create the required air effect. Also as stated Dan only held mine on with 4 or 5 self tapping screws I believe so it could come off as it did with minimal damage to the body it was attached to. Only down side to mine being ripped off was I then went over it with the nearside rear wheel and pressed it neatly into the pothole rendering it utterly useless.
I really like the look of the solutions that Peter and others have with a nice lip form at the front that looks blended with the bodywork but I have too many speed bumps where I live and I doubt a nice piece like that would last too long.
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