Feb-21-2018 04:16 PM
Feb-24-2018 08:37 AM
Feb-24-2018 05:12 AM
Passin Thru wrote:
Watch a Big jet 747 or 777 or A380 when they make contrails. Watch the contrails for a few minutes and you will see the Wake turbulence which is the scientific name for what you felt. It is just air tumbling over the rear of the truck, replacing the space it occupied.
Feb-23-2018 05:50 PM
Feb-23-2018 09:49 AM
Feb-23-2018 06:15 AM
Feb-23-2018 06:14 AM
Jim@HiTek wrote:
In my Class A, back when I needed to save fuel, I'd draft behind big semi's. And to find the sweet spot, I'd approach them from behind and when I felt the substantial wiggle, I'd move up another 12 feet or so. This is the suction zone and I can see my RPMs dropping while I maintain the same speed. I'm drafting in the semi's slip stream just inside the vortex tail. Saves fuel for me, but costs the semi driver's company. So I don't do it very often any more.
So, yeah, I'd expect there to be a disturbance behind a car carrier. But I've tried to draft behind them but the slip stream is too chaotic for that. The best vehicles to draft behind are double semis.
Feb-23-2018 06:14 AM
Feb-23-2018 06:00 AM
GrandpaKip wrote:
On this trip, we got some minor wiggle when we were behind 2 different car carriers on 95S in Georgia. I’ve never felt this before. Didn’t see it in the mirrors. 65 mph or less. Felt it in my butt. Just a jiggle that quit when I got around one of them. The other was when one passed me and pulled over fairly close. I slowed and increased the distance and it went away.
I am just curious if anyone else has noticed maybe a different air disturbance behind a car carrier.
Feb-22-2018 08:59 AM
Feb-22-2018 08:55 AM
drsteve wrote:
I used to have a high top conversion van that really wiggled behind semis. The worst ones were those with air deflectors on top of the tractor.
Feb-22-2018 08:42 AM
Jim@HiTek wrote:Tyler0215 wrote:
Car carriers create a lot of turbulance just because of the all the different exposed surfaces. Back off or pass.
As far as drafting, Jim, Its is not the way to save fuel. It's illegal for one thing. Also dumb, stupid, crazy, insane, How else can I say it?
A sudden stop and you achieve a zen state. You become one with the semi trailer.
What are you talking about? Illegal to follow a vehicle 200 to 300 feet or more behind? Since when?
Feb-22-2018 06:37 AM
Feb-22-2018 06:31 AM
Tyler0215 wrote:
Car carriers create a lot of turbulance just because of the all the different exposed surfaces. Back off or pass.
As far as drafting, Jim, Its is not the way to save fuel. It's illegal for one thing. Also dumb, stupid, crazy, insane, How else can I say it?
A sudden stop and you achieve a zen state. You become one with the semi trailer.
Feb-22-2018 05:35 AM