mikehaugen
Elite Member
Mythbusters has done this one at least twice. The only way to improve on stock is with a tight tailgate net if I remember. Same airflow stuff as tailgate up & a bit lighter.
Or a tonneau cover so I've heard.
Mythbusters has done this one at least twice. The only way to improve on stock is with a tight tailgate net if I remember. Same airflow stuff as tailgate up & a bit lighter.
Or a tonneau cover so I've heard.
Actually better with it up.
With it up the flow is more laminer. With it down the air churns just behind the cab creating induced drag.
The gain is minimal, about 3% if I remember correctly from the wind tunnel test we did 20 plus years ago.
Chris
Mythbusters has done this one at least twice. The only way to improve on stock is with a tight tailgate net if I remember. Same airflow stuff as tailgate up & a bit lighter.
The net actually made it worse. All other configurations were negligible gains.
Surprised dot didn't get them. Here they would have been all over him he wouldn't know what to do.
Ok, I will get all technical on you guys. The cab of a truck is working like the wing of a airplane.
The way a wing works is its basically flat on the bottom and curved on the top. Imagine a molecule of air hitting the leading edge and splitting in half then rejoining on the trailing edge. The half of the molecule on top of the wing has to travel farther so it must travel faster then the half going under the bottom. This creates a pocket of low pressure above the wing that literally "sucks" the wing up. This is how lift is created and how a airplane flies.
Same thing is happening with your trucks. Imagine the doghouse, cab, and bed as the wing. The low pressure being created on the top side is sucking things out of the bed.
Chris
You can see this if you have a little loose hay or woodchips in the bed of your truck and you drive down the road.
They will loop around in the back of the truck.
Aaron Z