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Posts with tag wind-tunnel

The April 2008 Chevy Volt update: Breezing through the GM Aero lab/wind tunnel

Filed under: EV/Plug-in, Hybrid, Chevrolet, GM, AutoblogGreen Exclusive, Green Daily



If you'd like to know just how a fan the size of the one in the image above (yes, those are humans walking under it) helps move wind around a giant rectangle at the GM Aero Lab, Frank Meinert is the guy you want to listen to. You can do so here:



Meinert gave us a tour of the wind tunnel and described how the decades-old fan is used to build the cars of tomorrow (if you're rather read about the tunnel, click here). That's interesting and all, but we were there to hear how the Areo Lab is helping design the Chevy Volt. Remember, the impact that drag has on the efficiency of the car is much greater than expected. A 400-pound decrease would increase the EV-only range of the Volt from 39 to 40 on the highway and 41 to 43 in the city. But improved aerodynamics (of 80 counts) ups the range from 37 to 43 miles on the highway and 40 to 43+ in the city. To explain where things are today is where Nina Tortosa stepped in. Tortosa is the performance engineer in the Aero Lab, and gave us a demonstration of the smoke wand being used on the 1/3rd scale Chevy Volt (see a video shot on the day of our visit here). Decked out in some duct-tape camo, the model didn't reveal any secrets about what the Volt will look like, but we did get a glimpse of the tunnel in action.

All day long, we heard about how the Volt if GM's top priority, and in a lot of areas this seemed to be the case. Don't tell this to the wind tunnel crews who need to work on the Volt during the third shift, though. Time in the wind tunnel is expensive and the Volt sometimes needs to take a back seat to making sure that the latest Malibu or Vue (or whatever) has a quiet enough interior. GM may be moving forward on all fronts with the Chevy Volt, but there are some things they can't leave behind.




Nina Tortosa

VIDEO: Chevy Volt model undergoing wind-tunnel testing at the GM Tech Center

Filed under: Hybrid, GM, USA



After browsing through some of your comments on the post we did about the latest GM Volt developments, we came across a link to a very interesting video thats causing a stir right now. Filmed and narrated Jeff Gilbert, a radio reporter for Detroit's WWJ (950 on your AM dial), it a offers a rare glimpse behind the curtain into the electric lab and wind tunnel at the GM Technical Center. In addition to action shots of aerodynamics testing, we see the battery packs and a Chevy Malibu being transformed into a Volt powertrain mule. That we see any of it at all is remarkable, seeing as there was a strict no-cameras policy in effect for this media visit. Hats off to Gilbert for having the juice to get himself a waiver.

Above all else, it's the aerodynamic testing that gets our attention. It featured a one-third-size Volt with the actual final production styling (pictured above). The concept version that we've all seen required extensive changes because its drag coefficient was as good backwards as forwards, and so it seems this is the design GM has decided on.

Follow the jump to watch the video and see a still shot of the Volt's front end. Thanks to Tim for the heads-up!

Volt aero and styling: Touring the E-Flex design studio and GM wind tunnel

Filed under: EV/Plug-in, Chevrolet, GM, AutoblogGreen Exclusive, Green Daily



At the General Motors Technical Center on Monday, the company provided another in a series of updates on development of the Chevrolet Volt as it approaches a production launch in late 2010. This time around the subject was aerodynamics and styling, both inside and out.

When the Volt concept was revealed almost a year ago, one of the big questions from readers here and elsewhere was about the aerodynamics. The exterior design team led by Bob Boniface had created a very striking design that looked absolutely nothing like the legendary EV1 teardrop. Judging from the first teaser shot we saw of the production design (above, and read more here), some things were going to have to change.

Read on past the jump to find out more.

[Source: General Motors]

Lutz: Chevy Volt aero might have been better if we put it in the wind tunnel backwards

Filed under: EV/Plug-in, Chevrolet



One of questions that went unanswered after the debut of the Chevy Volt earlier this year was the drag coefficient. Last night at a dinner with bloggers before the opening of the Los Angeles Auto Show, GM Vice-Chairman Bob Lutz provided a clue. While talking about the Volt he said that the production version would look different from the concept but will be recognizable as a Volt. When they put the concept into the wind tunnel it was a huge disappointment. Lutz said they might have gotten better results if they put it in backwards.

[Source: Bob Lutz]

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