โAug-26-2015 04:46 AM
โSep-25-2015 04:54 AM
โAug-31-2015 06:10 AM
JD and Beastlet wrote:
I think we're splitting hairs here.
โAug-31-2015 05:26 AM
Vulcan Rider wrote:JD and Beastlet wrote:
In my case I'm afraid you're both wrong. My ProPride 3P hitch eliminates sway, so the entire rig gets pulled in towards passing trucks.
And I'm afraid NOT.
What we are talking about here is NOT "sway".
It is a tiny but perceptible TURN in response to external forces.
โAug-30-2015 05:12 AM
Vulcan Rider wrote:4X4Dodger wrote:
Sorry but the effect is the same for cars, trucks and other vehicles.
And the others are correct this is what is happening when a truck passes you.
If you are really attuned to your vehicle you will feel the initial push of the bow wave, then comes the low pressure area or feeling of being pulled in.
Once again, contradictory statements. The last one is mostly true and explains the question originally asked here. If you are being overtaken, that initial bow wave hits you in the BACK and makes you feel that you are being pushed/sucked in the opposite direction.
You really do not feel the low pressure area, hopefully, because it remains within a few inches to maybe a foot of the big vehicle in question. OUTSIDE of that area, the pressure is higher.......UNITL you get to the back where the pressure wave collapses and a vacuum is formed.
And none of that really has anything to do with the Bernolli effect.
โAug-29-2015 02:26 PM
โAug-29-2015 12:50 PM
4X4Dodger wrote:
Sorry but the effect is the same for cars, trucks and other vehicles.
And the others are correct this is what is happening when a truck passes you.
If you are really attuned to your vehicle you will feel the initial push of the bow wave, then comes the low pressure area or feeling of being pulled in.
โAug-29-2015 11:39 AM
BarneyS wrote:
If you are going to continue the discussion on this subject, please - when you quote somebody - edit out the previous quotes so your quote only contains the last statement you are responding to.
โAug-29-2015 11:07 AM
โAug-29-2015 11:02 AM
Vulcan Rider wrote:
Some person, supposedly on the NASA payroll, wrote that. I certainly hope it doesn't represent an "official" position from them because......it is absolutely wrong.
The Bernoulli principle only applies to a specific set of circumstances: an enclosed tube and fluids. It is what makes carbs work....and some atomizers and some paint "guns".
The space between vehicles is not enclosed AND the things being "moved" are not fluids; they are big chunks of metal.
โAug-29-2015 06:07 AM
Dick_B wrote:
Nope, you are all wrong.
The real explanation is that the truck IS pushing air against the sides of the trailer and tow vehicle. BUT the least stable part of that assembly is between the trailer wheels and the hitch. When that part of the assembly is pushed away from the truck it tends to also move the back of the tow vehicle away from the truck which tends to turn the front of the tow vehicle TOWARDS the truck thus giving the impression of the truck sucking in the tow vehicle.
You're welcome.
โAug-29-2015 06:00 AM
wnjj wrote:NASA wrote:
An example of Bernoulli's principle in the real world is a car passing by a truck. The wind rushing between the two vehicles acts like a venturi tube. Because the pressure is less between the two, the car is pushed toward the truck by air pressure on the other side of the car.
โAug-28-2015 09:17 AM
โAug-28-2015 08:58 AM
Vulcan Rider wrote:wnjj wrote:
(A) This in turn accelerates the air to a higher speed within the "tube" which reduces the static pressure throughout the space between the vehicles.
(b) This is why there's a bow wake pushing you away followed by the suction pulling you in when another vehicle passes you.
(A) No it doesn't.
Your two statements above are in direct conflict with each other.
(B) UNTIL the overtaking big vehicle actually gets it's back end up to or slightly beyond your back end, the pressure wakes between the two are additive and you can't go fast enough to negate that.
This discussion is ridiculous. I quit.
NASA wrote:
An example of Bernoulli's principle in the real world is a car passing by a truck. The wind rushing between the two vehicles acts like a venturi tube. Because the pressure is less between the two, the car is pushed toward the truck by air pressure on the other side of the car.
โAug-28-2015 05:14 AM
wnjj wrote:
(A) This in turn accelerates the air to a higher speed within the "tube" which reduces the static pressure throughout the space between the vehicles.
(b) This is why there's a bow wake pushing you away followed by the suction pulling you in when another vehicle passes you.