New Supercar Technology Does Away With Windshields (livemint.com) 114
The Wall Street Journal reports on a new technology being developed by McLaren Technology Centre for its "Elva," a multi-million dollar, 804-horsepower two-seat roadster.
It doesn't have a windshield... In place of a windscreen, Elva will debut a technology called Active Air Management System (AAMS). When engaged, it generates two air flows streaming over the cockpit: One glances off the low, curvaceous wind deflector rising out of the front bodywork, with an energy proportional to vehicle speed. The other airflow is scooped up in a low-mounted grille intake and turned 135 degrees. Now ducted up and slightly forward, this high pressure flow intercepts the deflected airflow, bending the combined flows over the cockpit. Meanwhile, streaming air clinging to the hood wants to be drawn down, below face level, following the Elva's curving scuttle and dash.
And so the Elva's historically unique, eye-of-the-hurricane gestalt: Driver and passenger motoring at highway speeds, talking at normal volume, as warm or as cool as desired and, looking out, seeing nothing... but scenery. No helmet limiting their peripheral vision as if looking through a well-padded porthole, stifling breath and sense of smell. And no heavy, roof-supporting "A" pillars either, which clumsily bracket existence in almost all modern cars. The Elva is the motoring equivalent of a horizonless pool.
Under the right conditions the Elva's system can billow precipitation out of the way, over the car, so the occupants stay dry. Heading up the mountain to Gstaad? With the AAMS active, falling snow will swirl past but never settle... What about bugs? I asked. Will they be deflected too? "It depends on the mass of the bug," said Andrew Kay, Elva project chief engineer, being completely serious. What about stones thrown up by trucks? Overtalk...inaudible... In any event, McLaren expects all occupants will be wearing helmets on piste and will only engage the AAMS bareheaded at moderate speeds...
At 60 mph, the wind was so still I could have lit a cigarette.
It doesn't have a windshield... In place of a windscreen, Elva will debut a technology called Active Air Management System (AAMS). When engaged, it generates two air flows streaming over the cockpit: One glances off the low, curvaceous wind deflector rising out of the front bodywork, with an energy proportional to vehicle speed. The other airflow is scooped up in a low-mounted grille intake and turned 135 degrees. Now ducted up and slightly forward, this high pressure flow intercepts the deflected airflow, bending the combined flows over the cockpit. Meanwhile, streaming air clinging to the hood wants to be drawn down, below face level, following the Elva's curving scuttle and dash.
And so the Elva's historically unique, eye-of-the-hurricane gestalt: Driver and passenger motoring at highway speeds, talking at normal volume, as warm or as cool as desired and, looking out, seeing nothing... but scenery. No helmet limiting their peripheral vision as if looking through a well-padded porthole, stifling breath and sense of smell. And no heavy, roof-supporting "A" pillars either, which clumsily bracket existence in almost all modern cars. The Elva is the motoring equivalent of a horizonless pool.
Under the right conditions the Elva's system can billow precipitation out of the way, over the car, so the occupants stay dry. Heading up the mountain to Gstaad? With the AAMS active, falling snow will swirl past but never settle... What about bugs? I asked. Will they be deflected too? "It depends on the mass of the bug," said Andrew Kay, Elva project chief engineer, being completely serious. What about stones thrown up by trucks? Overtalk...inaudible... In any event, McLaren expects all occupants will be wearing helmets on piste and will only engage the AAMS bareheaded at moderate speeds...
At 60 mph, the wind was so still I could have lit a cigarette.
WOW! (Score:5, Insightful)
That's just awesome until you encounter an insect or rock or pretty much anything else.
Re:WOW! (Score:5, Insightful)
Rock is what comes to mind. I can recall clearly at least two times in which a rock hit the windshield right in front of my face. I cannot imagine any deflector or air circulation system that would have saved me there.
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Re:WOW! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Also great in the rain until you have to stop due to red light or traffic. I think you need the roof when raining.
Nobody buys a supercar thinking about stop lights or traffic jams.
Re: WOW! (Score:2)
Thatâ(TM)s not true. There are a couple of McLarens I occasionally see as I cycle past them (as in: overtake) on my way home after work as they trundle along in traffic between Hyde Park Corner and Hammersmith in London.
Re: WOW! (Score:2)
Stoplights: more time to be seen in their pointless car.
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I don't really know too many people who drive their supercars top down in miserable weather.
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My thoughts too - it might be able to deflect a minor drizzle, but heavy rainfall? - not a chance.
Maybe if they made it a convertible, with a retractable windshield coming out of the front?
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If you think someone buys a multimillion dollar car as a daily driver, you should probably rethink that.
Prospective buyers have a Bentley for those days.
Re: WOW! (Score:2)
I was once in the passenger seat going southbound during rush hour and about 50 yards ahead saw a giant tire fly over the median. It went to the right of our car by about 5 feet, level with my head, rolled about 20 yards, hit the front quarter of another car and flew about another 20 yars straight up. A couple gusts of air definitely wont stop something like that.
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It went to the right of our car by about 5 feet, level with my head,... A couple gusts of air definitely wont stop something like that.
Similar story. Talking at the side of the road with four of my mates, truck goes by at normal road speed (about 60-70kms/40-50mph), spare tire falls out at that moment and bounces off the road at an angle. We see the shadow and feel our hair move as the spare just clears our heads, bounces in my mates front yard, off the front off his house and back onto the road.
The conversation stopped instantly and we just stood there silently gaping wide open mouthed watching it bounce around as the traffic stops an
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Fucker just kicked it into upright and kept going. Everyone in my car burst out into appl
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"Eat the rich."
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Lasers.
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Goose, duck, pheasant, even a sparrow. What are these people thinking? Definitely helmet.
A helmet will do fuck-all... (Score:5, Insightful)
... with a ton of steel lying on top of you when you flip the car.
A roof and a roll cage are usually standard for a reason.
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It certain,y didn’t help the drivers of race cars from the “Speed Racer” cartoons, either.
I’d settle for the Mach V’s bubble room over this particular implementation as it was bulletproof and watertight when deployed at any speed.
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Some convertibles now have flip-up roll bars which automatically deploy very rapidly if the vehicle is flipping over.
A real concern is what happens when a rock or a goose or a deer comes at your face. A good windshield+frame can save your life in that situation.
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If you hit a deer in your supercar you're dead anyway, people don't buy these to drive the speed limit.
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"If you hit a deer in your supercar you're dead anyway,"
You are not automatically dead if you hit a deer in a supercar OR on a motorcycle, but you're a lot less likely to die with more protection around you.
Supercars have to meet crash standards too, unless they are kit cars, and they therefore have strong window frames like everything else. If the deer hits right in the middle of the windshield you're fucked, but if it also hits the frame you've got meaningful protection there.
"people don't buy these to dr
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I assume that's why it has two giant humps behind the seats. Looks like a 1950s retro-future design.
Probably won't be road legal in many places, track only. Ferrari do some cars like that, when you "buy" it Ferrari keep it for you and deliver it on a truck when you want to play.
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"That's just awesome until you encounter an insect or rock or pretty much anything else."
Like... traffic?
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You would be amazed at how even raindrops will sting if they hit you at 60+mph. I have had windshields hit by 5/16-24 hex nuts that sounded like someone shot it with a rifle. I guarantee that you will not get the air controlled enough to deflect something like that. And, what happens when you stop? Just get rained on?
Track-day special.
Re:WOW! (Score:5, Informative)
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Or stopped at a light in the rain.
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That's just awesome until you encounter an insect or rock or pretty much anything else.
Exactly right. I've had rocks, wood, and other debris impact my windshield many times. Worst was some drunk guys head when he staggered in front of my car on a dark street. Of course, there's deer and birds too. Anyone who thinks this is some kind of Star Trek force field will be in for surprise.
Speed racer (Score:2)
Sounds like Racer X's car,
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Re: WOW! (Score:2)
Anything that can deflect rain drops should have no problem also deflecting bird poop or even moderately sized bugs.
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It is fan-tastic isn't it ?
Imagine how much fun this will be at a stoplight, or in a parking lot while it's RAINING.
Or . . . wait for it. . . . when one of your active air streamers fails at 100kph. . . . . outstanding
Re: WOW! (Score:2)
I was a teenager riding my bike downhill with no shirt on when a big junebug hit me square in the chest, I was only going maybe 30mph, and it damn near took me off the bike, it left a red welt where it hit. Canâ(TM)t imagine one hitting my face at 70 mph or higher...
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It's all cool and wicked fun until you get that fat bumblebee stuck in your teeth or nice crunchy cicada swarm you drive through.
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Wonder if this works at low speeds (Score:1)
The idea is pretty sound, I've driven convertibles before in the rain and snow with the top down, and at speed you are pretty much not going to get wet with the airflow over the windshield sheltering you (now the back seat, if any...).
The system says it delivers a proportional airflow to speed of travel, I am wondering if it boosts that at low speeds so the airflow is still enough to keep bugs or rocks from hitting you - and if so, how noisy that is...
It seems like an awesome idea though, it would allow for
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How is air flow going to keep a rock from hitting you?
Re: Wonder if this works at low speeds (Score:2)
Enough airflow can easily deflect a rock. High pressure air can have tremendous force but you do run into a limiting factor where at some point a strong enough force field would become a danger if you accidentally touched it.
Re: Wonder if this works at low speeds (Score:1)
Also, don't tailgate dump trucks that can drop most significant rocks.
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If the question is "Can you deflect a 1cm rock traveling at 65 MPH toward your head sufficiently to make it miss with a stream of air?" then the answer is obviously going to be an unequivocal yes. High enough pressure and flow will do that, no question.
If the question is "Can this system do that?" then that's a vastly different question. My guess would be something along the lines of "Sure, it'll deflect it, very slightly. Probably not enough to keep it from hitting your head." But that's an uneducated
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it would allow for magnificent views on something like a canyon or forest drive.
So would getting out of your car and actually taking it in.
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I guess they don't have hail around there? (Score:5, Insightful)
And as to:
"In any event, McLaren expects all occupants will be wearing helmets on piste and will only engage the AAMS bareheaded at moderate speeds"
I'd rather have a windshield than have to wear a helmet in a car.
And how many people are going to actually wear helmets? Most of the people who are paying this much for a car probably won't even consider it.
Re:I guess they don't have hail around there? (Score:5, Informative)
Most of the people buying this car will, sadly, never actually drive it.
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Most of the people buying this car will, sadly, never actually drive it.
Well not much. They might take it to a track, and possibly cruise to very expensive and fashionable club/restaurant in a city centre.
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I would guess the people that buy something like will be driving but on the track and not as some sort of daily driver. It's much the as the Atom where no one is buying that for driving around town. Especially considering just how loud that vehicle is when driving at speed.
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And they are as heck wouldn't drive it in hail.
Re: I guess they don't have hail around there? (Score:2)
Except rally drivers.
Trust me, you want a helmet in a rally car. Especially when it flips.
Been there.
It's amazing what crashes you can simply climb out of, in a good rally car with a roll cage, helmet, proper crumple zone management, and all the whizz-bangs.
A fast cat with no roof and no helmet?
You're dead. You just don't know it yet.
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Yeah, those fast cats can be deadly. Especially mountain lions.
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I'm not sure I know of many supercars owners who take their car out when there's a chance of hail. Or rain for that matter.
Just don't stop moving if it is raining (Score:4, Interesting)
Does that air-flow keep the rain out at 0mph?
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Indeed. This car is definitely not for Seattle's rich, but Mountain View on the other hand might be nice, unless of course this setup does nothing for sound or exhaust of the diesel truck next you when your going zero on the 101.
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Reminds me of that Kickstarter scam for an "air powered" umbrella that was supposed to deflect rain using airflow alone. Of course it never worked and never had any chance of working. Aside from anything else if you built a system that could shift that much air it would be require ear defenders to use.
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Do rich people go joy riding their ludicrously expensive supercars in the rain?
Re: Just don't stop moving if it is raining (Score:2)
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Not without a full face helmet (Score:1)
I knew a guy a few years back who was doing 70mph while wearing an open face helmet on a bike in Arizona. I don't remember the name of the insect he ran into, but it killed him instantly. Deer or other large animals can also be an issue that a windshield can help you survive. But not always.
I'd also prefer to have a windshield with a frame for better rollover protection. Granted, a roll bar behind you will do more, but having a windshield frame in front can't hurt.
Plus there has to be times when a sudde
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Probably a .218 Bee in Arizona. Deadly!
Rain-Deflecting Open Top Car (April Fool's Day (Score:1)
Alternatively (Score:4, Interesting)
Alternatively you could completely encase the cockpit area with the body of the vehicle, and then line the interior with a 360 degree coverage of AR-enchanced display.
Doesn't sound like five star crash ratings ... (Score:3)
And more like head-splat with a side of heavy grinding! (Mmmmhhh.... *Homer noises*)
According to my Top Gear studies, drivers of fast cars aren't exactly know for careful and safe driving.
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Particularly when there is a lit wood stove on board.
I guess ... (Score:5, Funny)
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I gotta admit, I grew up driving something like this [jeepwavers.com]. No roll bar or anything like that. I would drive it at night sometimes with the windshield down (you didn't need a special tool to put the windshield down like modern jeeps). It was really weird to not have a windshield...
Of course, it's top speed was about 40 MPH. Not much of a "supercar", but I loved it.
That's a... (Score:2)
El v a car.
I guess if you're rich enough to afford it (Score:4, Funny)
You're rich enough to not stop at red lights or stop signs. And the rocks kicked up by other cars would never, EVER dare come towards you.
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Actually if you're rich enough to afford this you're unlikely to drive it unless it's perfect weather for it. These things are lesuire toys not cars.
Motorcycle version? (Score:2)
Q: How do you spot the happy motorcyclist?
A: By the bugshit in his teeth.
Old joke time (but /. lost it the first time).
Why would you drive it in the rain anyway? (Score:3)
Its clearly not your only car, or even your only sports car. If you have one of these, you presumably have a set of cars optimized for different driving conditions.
Mostly I expect you drive it slowly in town so people can see you in it.
Yeah but... (Score:1)
Will it stop baseball sized hail that often plagues the midwestern United States? I'd would also like a bit of a barrier between me and a baseball bat weilding maniac during a road rage incident so I have a few seconds at least to get oitnof there before my skull gets caved in.
And how will this keep animals, vandals, and the weather out when the car is parked?
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Will it stop baseball sized hail that often plagues the midwestern United States?
Why on earth would you drive it in the hail? People rich enough to own one aren't road warriors or using this for a daily commute.
I'd would also like a bit of a barrier between me and a baseball bat weilding maniac during a road rage incident so I have a few seconds at least to get oitnof there before my skull gets caved in.
Your men in the car behind will deal with that lout.
And how will this keep animals, vandals, and the weat
Nice (Score:2)
Theft? (Score:1)
So? (Score:3)
Useless (Score:3)
I've never heard of something so useless in my entire life.
One word: winter.
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You are rich enough to buy an impractical supercar costing millions and are worried about driving in winter? Your chauffeur can take you where you need to go in the Rolls when the weather is a problem.
Bird poop. Bees. Rocks... (Score:3)
No thanks (Score:2)
I doubt it would block out sound, really heavy rain/hail, or worse, random objects like rocks or road debris.
Sounds cool, but I'll pass.
Do deer slide up over it? (Score:2)
I once hit a deer in the early morning hours (~2AM) as I was coming home from work.
Several (five or six) deer ran across the freeway right in front of me -- nowhere to go because it was deer to the left, deer to the right, and deer straight ahead. I hit the brakes, but must have still been going 40 or 50 MPH at impact. After cratering the hood, one deer slide up my windshield and (apparently) got some upward momentum and then crashed back down on my roof (cratering it) a fraction of a second later before it
neat but (Score:2)
with no real world application in the marketingspace they are placing it.
However, Iâ(TM)m sure there will be other uses for an invisible air shield
Interesting, although not the first to try this (Score:2)
Air flow (Score:2)
Renault Sport Spider (Score:2)
You mean new technology like the Renault Sport Spider from 1996, where after 2 years, they added a version with the windshield (for a reason)?
cheap & reliable (Score:3)
you know what actual windshields provide; they're cheap & reliable.
which this airflow system is none of those.
another problem (Score:2)
While I admit that the whole "driving at 60 with no windshield" thing is genuinely cool engineering - that's great in wind-tunnel perfect conditions but what about
a) thermal control? IDGAF if the neato engineering is keeping the snowflakes out of your hair, I have to expect it would be cold AF if it's cold AF outside. As clever as they've directed the laminar airflow, I can't imagine that would do much to RETAIN needed heat in the vehicle when that is necessary?
b) non-perfectly-aligned winds? Last time I
No Helmet, No A-Pillars (Score:2)
No head when you roll over.
And it's not even April 1st. (Score:2)
Already with the April Fools' pranks [vox.com]
Perfect example (Score:2)
terrible safety (Score:2)
I assume they hae a weather-control device (Score:2)
Otherwise, whether you're on the road in a traffic jam, because half of all Americans utterly freak out when, say, crossing a bridge or there is the slightest precipitation, or you're at a stoplight, and it's raining/sleeting/hailing, you're going to get wet.
I still remember walking across a street in downtown Chicago 20 years ago, on my way into work, and the Ferrari stopped at the traffic light....
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It's the Depression all over again: Duesenbergs for the haves and shit-sandwiches for the rest of us.
Oh, you didn't hear the latest?
Due to rationing from the CoronaFrenzy, there is no more bread for your sandwich.
Seriously, local supermarkets have put limits on the amount of purchases. That is with now 2 confirmed cases, seems like everybody has lost their minds.
The only fortunate thing is I usually shop for 2-3 months worth of food, and freeze a ton of it. I went in late February.
As long as the power and my freezer hold out, I'm good until maybe late May for everything but fresh fruit and vegetables. I al
Re: It's the Depression... (Score:1)
We'll have bread lines and yet we're extremely anti-communist. How is this possible, must be one of those conspiracies Alex Jones told me about.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]