US20060017307A1 - Automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift - Google Patents

Automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20060017307A1
US20060017307A1 US10/894,175 US89417504A US2006017307A1 US 20060017307 A1 US20060017307 A1 US 20060017307A1 US 89417504 A US89417504 A US 89417504A US 2006017307 A1 US2006017307 A1 US 2006017307A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
fuselage
automobile
seats
plate
passenger
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
US10/894,175
Other versions
US6994394B1 (en
Inventor
Vitaliy Lyakir
Alla Litovchenko
Dmitry Denikin
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US10/443,169 external-priority patent/US20040232727A1/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US10/894,175 priority Critical patent/US6994394B1/en
Publication of US20060017307A1 publication Critical patent/US20060017307A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US6994394B1 publication Critical patent/US6994394B1/en
Adjusted expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B62LAND VEHICLES FOR TRAVELLING OTHERWISE THAN ON RAILS
    • B62DMOTOR VEHICLES; TRAILERS
    • B62D35/00Vehicle bodies characterised by streamlining
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B62LAND VEHICLES FOR TRAVELLING OTHERWISE THAN ON RAILS
    • B62DMOTOR VEHICLES; TRAILERS
    • B62D35/00Vehicle bodies characterised by streamlining
    • B62D35/007Rear spoilers
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B62LAND VEHICLES FOR TRAVELLING OTHERWISE THAN ON RAILS
    • B62DMOTOR VEHICLES; TRAILERS
    • B62D39/00Vehicle bodies not otherwise provided for, e.g. safety vehicles
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02TCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
    • Y02T10/00Road transport of goods or passengers
    • Y02T10/80Technologies aiming to reduce greenhouse gasses emissions common to all road transportation technologies
    • Y02T10/82Elements for improving aerodynamics

Definitions

  • the invention pertains to the automobile fuselage design field of endeavor, and more specifically to an aerodynamically improved car's body. Because the air resistance to an object moving through, a regular pontoon-shaped automobile body cuts the frontal air flow, the way where two unequal major air flows are running around top and bottom of the fuselage. Due to the comparative flatness of this fuselage on the bottom side, the bottom airflow is shorter than the upper one and runs slower. Hence, an air density and pressure below the automobile bottom exceeds the same above the roof. Occurrence of such as a force which called “an aerodynamic lift” (or vertical contra-gravity force) reduces vehicle stability by pulling a moving object against its gravitational force propor-more even, one shall have shape with greater equality in size between its top and bottom surfaces. For instance, the body shaped as an acute angled parallelogram in its side cross-section will create desirable air pressure equality.
  • a conventional fuselage rear end design (box, sloping box, fastback, notch back models, etc.) is not very effective in reducing the previously described aerodynamic lift. Due to the wind approaching a compact fuselage at a higher angle than a larger one, a higher aerodynamic lift occurred in the first case at compatible speed values. As a result, a typical automobile of small classes has higher wind resistance sensitivity, and comparatively uncertain stability due to a higher ratio between cars speed and wheels/road contact comparing to larger car models.
  • the present invention is intended as an aerodynamic lift decreasing vehicular body of an acute angled parallelogram shape in its side section of the type described introductory which exhibits the neglected volume of aerodynamic lift force in order to increase contact with the road surface of the type of vehicle in question.
  • the invention attains this objective in that the front-upper surface of the fuselage is made roughly equal in length to the bottom-rear surface in such a way that air flowing both ways around a car's body gets equal speed, equal density and occur equal pressure on the fuselage surface from both sides.
  • the point of departure for the present invention is the fact, which is in itself known, that an air flow resisting a moving car became separated by its fuselage, and here a value of an occurred air pressure on each part of the vehicle's surface is in direct proportion to the speed of air flow contacting this part
  • Air pressure of this kind occurs, in particular, around conventional pontoon fuselage wherein uneven airflow separation causes a resulting air pressure contrary to gravitation.
  • the present invention allow fuselage to create an equal horizontal airflow separation along the surface of this parallelogram-shaped body to eliminate an aerodynamic lift or perhaps to obtain a negative direction of aerodynamic lift to increase, along with a gravitational force, the moving vehicle's stability.
  • An acute angle parallelogram shaped fuselage stroked into its back by following passenger car's sadiator allows the first to slide on top of the other. Occured along the car body's rear plate sliding reduces a Direct Striking Force and bounces it away from passenger seats. Imaginatively possible overturning is more acceptable over cars' rear compartment's banding or crushing for getting smaller the forces applied against fuselage from exterior.
  • the sliding feature of the acute angle parallelogram shaped fuselage imposes a limit on the collision forces value.
  • Reverse ratio between the improved vehicle's rear plate durability and its weight suggest possible achievement of such a value of the first that any collision forces value exceeding the value of improved vehicle's weight, cause lifting of this vehicle higher up, instead of allowing the fuselage rear plate to band.
  • FIG. 1 is the side section of typical pontoon fuselage and schematically illustrates an aerodynamic lifting force occurring to a car body
  • FIG. 2 is the side section of improved fuselage of acute angle parallelogram shape and schematically illustrates aerodynamic lift elimination
  • FIG. 3 is more detailed side section of typical pontoon fuselage rear compartment which illustrates passenger's backbone position
  • FIG. 4 is more detailed side section of an improved fuselage rear compartment which illustrates passenger's backbone improved position and location of the axle allowing rear seats to rotate around
  • FIG. 5 shows a collision sketch, where the improved fuselage is getting stroked from behind, and slides along its back plate curvature on top of radiator behind
  • collision forces resolution shows in detail the redistribution of acting forces along the improved fuselage's surface
  • FIG. 7 indicate typical location and size of conventional passenger compartment's volume used for secondary function (i.e. luggage place, accident body buffer zone)
  • FIG. 8 indicate improved passenger compartment volume used as trunk
  • FIG. 9 illustrate embodiment of this invention with spoiler attached to upper plate and with rear wheel booth on the wheel frame extenuation placed behind the fuselage of previous description, and indicate improved passenger compartment volume used for accident body buffer zone.
  • FIG. 10 illustrate preferable embodiment of this invention with one extra conventional seats row and vertical chock absorbers
  • FIG. 11 illustrate preferable embodiment of this invention from behind with open rear door.
  • the present invention is the automobile fuselage designed to make uniformed in its value the air-flow distribution occurring around named fuselage top and bottom and attain this by employing shorter the bottom plate ( 4 - 1 ), projected horizontally backward not further than the vehicle rear wheels' booth location at standard wheel frame ( 9 ), where booth is placed right after the last row of that named upper plate meets the rear plate ( 3 - 4 ) of named fuselage further backward than this rear plate ( 3 - 4 ) meets named bottom plate ( 4 - 1 ) so that the named rear plate ( 3 - 4 ) must be placed nearly parallel to the front plate ( 1 - 2 ) of named fuselage making nearly 45 degree angle to horizontal axis and further this invention comprising one or more rows of conventional seats ( 14 ), and the last row of new rear seats ( 5 , 6 , 7 ) placed around the rear wheels booth location at standard wheel frame ( 9 ) and along the rear plate curvature as it shown on FIG.
  • the rear wheels can be extended further back from the bottom plate on the wheel frame extenuation, preferably having the rear bumper, the way that the lower airflow (L 2 ) able running between the wheel booth and the fuselage.
  • FIG. 1 schematic side section view of a conventional fuselage, comprising the front plate from 1 to 2 , upper plate from 2 to 3 , rear plate from 3 to 4 , bottom plate from 4 to 1 show the airflow separation L 1 and L 2 from the imaginary point of separation D, to the imaginary point of reintegration U.
  • the value of air pressure F 1 on the top and F 2 on the bottom of the fuselage shall be in the direct ratio to the value of an air density P over the fuselage area A; and similarly at the inverse ratio to the flows speed V, and to the fuselage area A with its length of air flow L, from area of flows separation to the area of their reintegration (time T is equal for both):
  • FIG. 2 the improved fuselage of acute angle parallelogram shape in its side section presented with plates' numeration accordingly.
  • Both acute angles of the body structure are the boundaries for fuselage front-upper ( 1 - 2 - 3 ) and bottom-rear ( 3 - 4 - 1 ) surfaces, which effected evenly by an airflow (L 1 and L 2 ) with miimizing the force of an Aerodynamic Lift, accordingly Bernoulli's Principle:
  • a negative Aerodynamic Lift may occur when due to the appropriate car's body configuration, a fuselage top will be designed more flat than a bottom:
  • FIG. 3 shown passenger's body position on conventional rear seat ( 14 ) inside typical passenger compartment, with backbone in tension ( 13 ).
  • FIG. 4 placed right behind conventional seats ( 14 ) and the rear wheel booth ( 9 ) the improved rear seats are shown in details with three sections: ( 5 ) to support passenger feet and calve, ( 6 ) to support further to passenger's hamstrings and buttock, and ( 7 ) to be placed about parallel to the body front and rear plates as a back of the improved seats, therefore with improvement of backbone position ( 13 ).
  • the rear seats able to rotate around horizontal axle ( 19 ) located at the rear seats' foremost frontal point whenever direction of strike by vehicle behind or its physical parameters do not allow improved fuselage to slide on top of radiator of said vehicle.
  • a fuselage sliding resistance Rs is the smallest force to counteract against an attack from the rear in case the car's body durability mE will be large enough to exceed one: (Rs ⁇ G ⁇ mE)
  • FIG. 7 illustrate passenger's compartment unused space ( 17 ) and trunk ( 11 ) volume.
  • FIG. 8 illustrate the advantage of over existing car body types of new combination of trunk with passenger compartment ( 11 ), placed right behind the conventional seats ( 14 ) and the rear wheel booth ( 9 ).
  • FIG. 9 illustrate the advantage over existing car body types of the combination of trunk with passenger compartment ( 17 ) on the improved fuselage with one conventional seats row ( 14 ), and rear wheel booth ( 9 ) on the extended wheel frame ( 12 ) with the rear bumper ( 15 ), having spoiler ( 10 ) attached to fuselage top, or otherwise spoiler ( 10 ) made as a part of one, for increasing the bottom-rear body surface to elongate the lower airflow L 2 , coming between wheels' frame rear ( 12 ) and between the rear wheel booth ( 9 ) and fuselage surface ( 18 ).
  • FIG. 10 illustrate the disclosed fuselage embodiment with one extra conventional seats row ( 14 ), vertically operated rear door ( 8 ), and with vertical chock absorbers ( 16 ), having attached spoiler ( 10 ).
  • FIG. 11 the sketch of the preferred embodiment from behind the rear door ( 8 ) open vertically along the longitudinal axes at the left side of the fuselage's passenger rear compartment.
  • the presence, location, and type of such a doors is optional.
  • the rear door(s) 6 open vertically about hinges 7 located along the longitudinal axes in the middle of the car's roof or otherwise at the left side of the fuselage's passenger rear compartment.

Abstract

Automobile body performing with reduced aerodynamic lift while speeding, and therefore having its fuselage shape of a parallelogram with acute angle. The fuselage is made with roof projected straight backward and also having its body rear plate, slanted upward toward its car's rear end to create a body of parallelogram shape at the side section. Reducing aerodynamic lift, which normally occurs while car is moving at a high speed, will happen when separation of air flow around the top and bottom of the car's body will distributed with less than a standard difference in length, speed, and air density of both parts, and will result in more or less equality in air pressure occurring around the top and bottom of the automobile fuselage. Such an air flow redistribution allow lower air drug with higher profile of the vehicle fuselage and more control over a speeding vehicle. Rear compartment design allow to combine it with trunk, also achieve better safety of rear side in collision, as well as passenger on rear seats due to passenger hamstrings fixed position, and geting more comfort for passenger by interior envelop space redistribution.

Description

    CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • Not Applicable
  • STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
  • Not Applicable
  • INCORPORATION-BY-REFERENCE OF MATERIAL SUBMITTED ON A COMPACT DISC
  • Not Applicable
  • This is a continuation in part of the application Ser. No. 10/443,169 filed at Jul. 25, 2003 to substitute the original filing.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • The invention pertains to the automobile fuselage design field of endeavor, and more specifically to an aerodynamically improved car's body. Because the air resistance to an object moving through, a regular pontoon-shaped automobile body cuts the frontal air flow, the way where two unequal major air flows are running around top and bottom of the fuselage. Due to the comparative flatness of this fuselage on the bottom side, the bottom airflow is shorter than the upper one and runs slower. Hence, an air density and pressure below the automobile bottom exceeds the same above the roof. Occurrence of such as a force which called “an aerodynamic lift” (or vertical contra-gravity force) reduces vehicle stability by pulling a moving object against its gravitational force propor-more even, one shall have shape with greater equality in size between its top and bottom surfaces. For instance, the body shaped as an acute angled parallelogram in its side cross-section will create desirable air pressure equality.
  • A conventional fuselage rear end design (box, sloping box, fastback, notch back models, etc.) is not very effective in reducing the previously described aerodynamic lift. Due to the wind approaching a compact fuselage at a higher angle than a larger one, a higher aerodynamic lift occurred in the first case at compatible speed values. As a result, a typical automobile of small classes has higher wind resistance sensitivity, and comparatively uncertain stability due to a higher ratio between cars speed and wheels/road contact comparing to larger car models.
  • The lack of space in the rear part of a passenger compartment of typical small classes' fuselage demands adult passengers to bend their neck. This make rear seats of those uncomfortable and affect people heals. Also, the rear compartment of this type of design has low efficiency of inner space usage and has a high drag coefficient.
  • Various designs to reduce front airflow resistance, drag coefficient, side-wind sensitivity are known, such as under U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,489,972 and 4,505,507. Yet a notable reduction of aerodynamic lift was achieved either by flattening of the automobile fuselage (which also limits an observation angle), or by using a spoiler of large size for increasing an airflow pressure on the fuselage's rear top (although getting an increased air drag coefficient).
  • BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention is intended as an aerodynamic lift decreasing vehicular body of an acute angled parallelogram shape in its side section of the type described introductory which exhibits the neglected volume of aerodynamic lift force in order to increase contact with the road surface of the type of vehicle in question.
  • The invention attains this objective in that the front-upper surface of the fuselage is made roughly equal in length to the bottom-rear surface in such a way that air flowing both ways around a car's body gets equal speed, equal density and occur equal pressure on the fuselage surface from both sides.
  • The point of departure for the present invention is the fact, which is in itself known, that an air flow resisting a moving car became separated by its fuselage, and here a value of an occurred air pressure on each part of the vehicle's surface is in direct proportion to the speed of air flow contacting this part
  • Air pressure of this kind occurs, in particular, around conventional pontoon fuselage wherein uneven airflow separation causes a resulting air pressure contrary to gravitation. The present invention allow fuselage to create an equal horizontal airflow separation along the surface of this parallelogram-shaped body to eliminate an aerodynamic lift or perhaps to obtain a negative direction of aerodynamic lift to increase, along with a gravitational force, the moving vehicle's stability.
  • This fuselage quality obtained by increasing in length its bottom-rear surface and simultaneous decreasing in length its front-upper surface to make the last equal or otherwise smaller than the other, with the rear plate inclination from the rear wheel booth, placed right behind last conventional seats row, toward the upper-rear fuselage part to meet the upper plate further backward than its connection with the bottom plate. Therefore, the automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift is presented.
  • Advantages of this invention are:
  • Optimization of vehicle dynamic stability due to gettig the contact between vehicle wheels and road surface increased, where faster car movemen show the higher advantage of this invention comparing to conventional car models.
  • A more comfortable body position allowed in the rear passenger chair, because new back-seats introduce larger room for people's back and neck, to avoid a banding position.
  • An acute angle parallelogram shaped fuselage stroked into its back by following passenger car's sadiator allows the first to slide on top of the other. Occured along the car body's rear plate sliding reduces a Direct Striking Force and bounces it away from passenger seats. Imaginatively possible overturning is more acceptable over cars' rear compartment's banding or crushing for getting smaller the forces applied against fuselage from exterior.
  • Described herein above, the sliding feature of the acute angle parallelogram shaped fuselage imposes a limit on the collision forces value. Reverse ratio between the improved vehicle's rear plate durability and its weight, suggest possible achievement of such a value of the first that any collision forces value exceeding the value of improved vehicle's weight, cause lifting of this vehicle higher up, instead of allowing the fuselage rear plate to band.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
  • An embodiment of the invention will be better understood by referring to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which identical reference numerals identify similar elements, and in which:
  • FIG. 1 is the side section of typical pontoon fuselage and schematically illustrates an aerodynamic lifting force occurring to a car body
  • FIG. 2 is the side section of improved fuselage of acute angle parallelogram shape and schematically illustrates aerodynamic lift elimination
  • FIG. 3 is more detailed side section of typical pontoon fuselage rear compartment which illustrates passenger's backbone position
  • FIG. 4 is more detailed side section of an improved fuselage rear compartment which illustrates passenger's backbone improved position and location of the axle allowing rear seats to rotate around
  • FIG. 5 shows a collision sketch, where the improved fuselage is getting stroked from behind, and slides along its back plate curvature on top of radiator behind
  • On FIG. 6 collision forces resolution shows in detail the redistribution of acting forces along the improved fuselage's surface
  • FIG. 7 indicate typical location and size of conventional passenger compartment's volume used for secondary function (i.e. luggage place, accident body buffer zone)
  • FIG. 8 indicate improved passenger compartment volume used as trunk
  • FIG. 9 illustrate embodiment of this invention with spoiler attached to upper plate and with rear wheel booth on the wheel frame extenuation placed behind the fuselage of previous description, and indicate improved passenger compartment volume used for accident body buffer zone.
  • FIG. 10 illustrate preferable embodiment of this invention with one extra conventional seats row and vertical chock absorbers
  • FIG. 11 illustrate preferable embodiment of this invention from behind with open rear door.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
  • 1-2—front plate; 2-3—upper plate; 3-4—rear plate; 4-1—bottom plate; 5—first part of new back seats; 6—second part of new back seats; 7—third part of new back seats; 8—vertical rear door; 9—rear wheel booth; 10—spoiler; 11—trunk; 12—extended wheel frame; 13—backbone in the neck area; 14—conventional seat rows; 15—rear bumper; 16—vertical hock absorber; 17—passenger accident buffer zone; 18—fuselage rear plate shown interiorly, between sides of the extended wheel frame;
  • The present invention is the automobile fuselage designed to make uniformed in its value the air-flow distribution occurring around named fuselage top and bottom and attain this by employing shorter the bottom plate (4-1), projected horizontally backward not further than the vehicle rear wheels' booth location at standard wheel frame (9), where booth is placed right after the last row of that named upper plate meets the rear plate (3-4) of named fuselage further backward than this rear plate (3-4) meets named bottom plate (4-1) so that the named rear plate (3-4) must be placed nearly parallel to the front plate (1-2) of named fuselage making nearly 45 degree angle to horizontal axis and further this invention comprising one or more rows of conventional seats (14), and the last row of new rear seats (5,6,7) placed around the rear wheels booth location at standard wheel frame (9) and along the rear plate curvature as it shown on FIG. 4 with the first part running from the named conventional seats nearly horizontally backward to support passenger feet and calves (5) and further running nearly vertically down to support human buttocks and upper thighs (6) while the vehicle speed is decreasing, and further the passenger seats' back situated nearly parallel to the named fuselage rear plate at nearly 45 degree angle to horizontal axis. These angles must be not limited to the named above exactly and may be conveniently modified within a range of lesser than 45 degree.
  • The rear wheels can be extended further back from the bottom plate on the wheel frame extenuation, preferably having the rear bumper, the way that the lower airflow (L2) able running between the wheel booth and the fuselage.
  • At FIG. 1 schematic side section view of a conventional fuselage, comprising the front plate from 1 to 2, upper plate from 2 to 3, rear plate from 3 to 4, bottom plate from 4 to 1 show the airflow separation L1 and L2 from the imaginary point of separation D, to the imaginary point of reintegration U. The value of air pressure F1 on the top and F2 on the bottom of the fuselage shall be in the direct ratio to the value of an air density P over the fuselage area A; and similarly at the inverse ratio to the flows speed V, and to the fuselage area A with its length of air flow L, from area of flows separation to the area of their reintegration (time T is equal for both):
  • P=F/A; Where:
  • L1>L2; then: A1>A2; also: V1>V2; (L=VT; T1=T2;)
  • P1<P2; accordingly Bernoulli's Principle; Therefore: F2>F1;
  • Resulting force: Fa(max)=F2−F1; this Fa(max) represents an Aerodynamic Lifting Force (Aerodynamic Lift, which affect contrary gravity force G to reduce it with minimizing contact between speeding vehicle and the road surface
    G−Fa(max)=G′; G′<G;
  • On FIG. 2 the improved fuselage of acute angle parallelogram shape in its side section presented with plates' numeration accordingly. Both acute angles of the body structure are the boundaries for fuselage front-upper (1-2-3) and bottom-rear (3-4-1) surfaces, which effected evenly by an airflow (L1 and L2) with miimizing the force of an Aerodynamic Lift, accordingly Bernoulli's Principle:
  • L1=L2; then: V1=V2; similarly: P1=P2; therefore: F2=/F1/; or: Fa(max)=F2−F1=0;
  • In this case: G′=G;
  • A negative Aerodynamic Lift may occur when due to the appropriate car's body configuration, a fuselage top will be designed more flat than a bottom:
  • L1<L2; (T1=T2;) then: V1<V2; hence: P1>P2; therefore: F2<F1;
    G′=G+Fa(max); G′>G;
  • On FIG. 3 shown passenger's body position on conventional rear seat (14) inside typical passenger compartment, with backbone in tension (13).
  • On FIG. 4, placed right behind conventional seats (14) and the rear wheel booth (9) the improved rear seats are shown in details with three sections: (5) to support passenger feet and calve, (6) to support further to passenger's hamstrings and buttock, and (7) to be placed about parallel to the body front and rear plates as a back of the improved seats, therefore with improvement of backbone position (13). The rear seats able to rotate around horizontal axle (19) located at the rear seats' foremost frontal point whenever direction of strike by vehicle behind or its physical parameters do not allow improved fuselage to slide on top of radiator of said vehicle.
  • On FIG. 5 collision is shown with a participant car bodies' movement direction and where the improved fuselage slides on top of the radiator striking from behind.
  • FIG. 6, shows collision forces resolution: a collision vector Fc founding a rolling resistance Rr on the sloped (angle Q) area at the fuselage rear surface 3-4 and being channeling by gravitation G and a road surface resistance Fr, resulting in bouncing down-forward as F and up-forward as F′. (Fc=F+F′); A fuselage sliding resistance Rs is the smallest force to counteract against an attack from the rear in case the car's body durability mE will be large enough to exceed one: (Rs×G<mE)
  • F parallel to 3-4; F′ perpendicular to 3-4; (where 3-4 is the fuselage rear surface slanted at an angle Q, the way its top is projected toward its back upward).
  • After striking surface 3-4, the Collision Force vector Fc is channeled toward vector F to slide along 3-4 (due to the sliding resistance Rs is the smallest force on the way). Rs<mE, where mE represents a car body's rear plate durability.
  • Then F′, a part of Fc perpendicular to 3-4 (Fc−F=F′), during the time of the collision(t) is distributed along surface 3-4, minimizing the force's F′ impact on the initial point of contact with the fuselage.
  • Therefore it is available option to exclude possibility of the vehicle's rear plate crushing. For this its or the chock absorbers (16) durability (mE) is made strong enough to withstand the maximal
  • Since the vector of a Collision Force (Fc) directed to approach surface of the car body's rear plate on a sharp angle, it will never crush this fuselage:
  • Fc=F′ sin Q; F′=Fc cscQ; mE>Fc(t)cscQ;
  • Any collision force will only lift the improved fuselage higher up.
  • FIG. 7 illustrate passenger's compartment unused space (17) and trunk (11) volume.
  • FIG. 8 illustrate the advantage of over existing car body types of new combination of trunk with passenger compartment (11), placed right behind the conventional seats (14) and the rear wheel booth (9).
  • FIG. 9 illustrate the advantage over existing car body types of the combination of trunk with passenger compartment (17) on the improved fuselage with one conventional seats row (14), and rear wheel booth (9) on the extended wheel frame (12) with the rear bumper (15), having spoiler (10) attached to fuselage top, or otherwise spoiler (10) made as a part of one, for increasing the bottom-rear body surface to elongate the lower airflow L2, coming between wheels' frame rear (12) and between the rear wheel booth (9) and fuselage surface (18).
  • FIG. 10 illustrate the disclosed fuselage embodiment with one extra conventional seats row (14), vertically operated rear door (8), and with vertical chock absorbers (16), having attached spoiler (10).
  • On FIG. 11 the sketch of the preferred embodiment from behind the rear door (8) open vertically along the longitudinal axes at the left side of the fuselage's passenger rear compartment. The presence, location, and type of such a doors is optional.
  • All embodyments disclosed at FIG. 9-11 and other similar modifications of the shown on FIG. 2 and defined in details earlier as the vehicular body of acute angle parallelogram shape in its side section are optional and not deprive from the scop of said vehicle features.
  • On the sketch of the preferred embodiment on FIG. 9, the rear door(s) 6 open vertically about hinges 7 located along the longitudinal axes in the middle of the car's roof or otherwise at the left side of the fuselage's passenger rear compartment.
  • Numerous modifications, variations and alterations may be made to the specific embodiment of the invention herein above described, without departing from the scope of the invention as defined as follows:

Claims (7)

1. A fuselage of an automobile comprising:
said automobile fuselage of an acute angle parallelogram shape in its side cross-section,
a top plate projected horizontally strait backward,
a bottom plate limited by a last row of conventional seats,
a rear wheel booth, placed at an end of bottom plate,
a body rear plate mounted at an acute angle to horizontal axis upward toward fuselage back to be about parallel to the front plate,
rear seats comprising three parts, wherein a first part running from the last conventional seats row about horizontally backward, a second part running down nearly vertically, and a third part running upward to automobile rear about parallel to said automobile fuselage rear plate to be the back of said seats.
2. The fuselage of an automobile of claim 1 further comprising extra conventional seats rows
3. The fuselage of an automobile of claim 1 wherein the wheel booth, placed at a wheel frame extenuation with a space between the wheel booth and the fuselage rear and bottom plates.
4. The fuselage of an automobile of claim 1 further comprising spoilers attached to the top plate.
5. The fuselage of an automobile of claim 1 with the top plate projected backward over the rear-plate upper end.
6. The fuselage of an automobile of claim 1 further comprising a vertical chock absorbers with spoiler.
7. The fuselage of an automobile of claim 1 comprising its rear seats rotated around a horizontal axle located at the rear seats foremost frontal point.
US10/894,175 2003-05-23 2004-07-20 Automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift Expired - Fee Related US6994394B1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/894,175 US6994394B1 (en) 2003-05-23 2004-07-20 Automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/443,169 US20040232727A1 (en) 2003-05-23 2003-05-23 Automobile body having improved aerodynamic shape
US10/894,175 US6994394B1 (en) 2003-05-23 2004-07-20 Automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/443,169 Continuation-In-Part US20040232727A1 (en) 2003-05-23 2003-05-23 Automobile body having improved aerodynamic shape

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20060017307A1 true US20060017307A1 (en) 2006-01-26
US6994394B1 US6994394B1 (en) 2006-02-07

Family

ID=46321603

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/894,175 Expired - Fee Related US6994394B1 (en) 2003-05-23 2004-07-20 Automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US6994394B1 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20090304648A1 (en) * 2004-08-02 2009-12-10 Charles F. Owen Mast Cell Stabilizers to Prevent or Treat Laminitis

Citations (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3026066A (en) * 1959-10-19 1962-03-20 Eugene A Coates Combination land and air vehicle
US3776587A (en) * 1972-02-14 1973-12-04 K Oxlade Surface vehicles with venturi attachment
US3982787A (en) * 1974-01-11 1976-09-28 Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nurnberg Ag Seat arrangement for a passenger car
US4313511A (en) * 1980-09-08 1982-02-02 Soo Hoo Wayne J Land vehicle
US4624469A (en) * 1985-12-19 1986-11-25 Bourne Jr Maurice W Three-wheeled vehicle with controlled wheel and body lean
US4625825A (en) * 1983-03-21 1986-12-02 Ethier Pierre M Front-drive three-wheels vehicle with tandem drive and passenger
US4778130A (en) * 1986-05-08 1988-10-18 Kyusik Kim Ultra hypersonic aircraft
US4881701A (en) * 1988-03-14 1989-11-21 Bullard Gary M Combination automobile and airplane
US4986493A (en) * 1988-01-05 1991-01-22 Branko Sarh Convertible fixed wing aircraft
US5042870A (en) * 1986-11-02 1991-08-27 Yamaha Hatsudoki Kabushiki Kaisha Motor vehicle
US5056860A (en) * 1989-04-06 1991-10-15 Fiat Auto S.P.A. High-performance motor car
US5146203A (en) * 1990-10-15 1992-09-08 Leonid Simuni Automobile for racing
US5259571A (en) * 1991-03-06 1993-11-09 Blazquez Jose M R Aircraft with gyroscopic stabilization system
US5407245A (en) * 1988-11-07 1995-04-18 Daimler-Benz Ag Process and device for reducing the drag in the rear region of a vehicle, for example, a road or rail vehicle or the like
US5833256A (en) * 1995-11-20 1998-11-10 Gilmore; Roger C. User powered vehicle and propulsion mechanism
US5924763A (en) * 1997-04-09 1999-07-20 Trac-Tech, Llc Wing assembly for drag racers
US6042052A (en) * 1998-09-25 2000-03-28 Smith; Donald E. Retractable step fairing for amphibian airplane
US6129306A (en) * 1997-03-05 2000-10-10 Pham; Roger N. C. Easily-convertible high-performance roadable aircraft
US6167829B1 (en) * 1997-10-09 2001-01-02 Thomas G. Lang Low-drag, high-speed ship
US6170847B1 (en) * 1997-06-10 2001-01-09 Roger N. C. Pham High performance fully-enclosed center-tracking vehicle
US6230836B1 (en) * 1995-09-25 2001-05-15 Cke Technologies Inc. Aerodynamic automobile
US6378932B1 (en) * 1999-03-18 2002-04-30 Daimlerchrysler Ag Motor vehicle with flow-influencing devices to reduce air resistance
US6896309B2 (en) * 2002-08-27 2005-05-24 Honda Giken Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Vehicle seat storage assisting apparatus

Patent Citations (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3026066A (en) * 1959-10-19 1962-03-20 Eugene A Coates Combination land and air vehicle
US3776587A (en) * 1972-02-14 1973-12-04 K Oxlade Surface vehicles with venturi attachment
US3982787A (en) * 1974-01-11 1976-09-28 Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nurnberg Ag Seat arrangement for a passenger car
US4313511A (en) * 1980-09-08 1982-02-02 Soo Hoo Wayne J Land vehicle
US4625825A (en) * 1983-03-21 1986-12-02 Ethier Pierre M Front-drive three-wheels vehicle with tandem drive and passenger
US4624469A (en) * 1985-12-19 1986-11-25 Bourne Jr Maurice W Three-wheeled vehicle with controlled wheel and body lean
US4778130A (en) * 1986-05-08 1988-10-18 Kyusik Kim Ultra hypersonic aircraft
US5042870A (en) * 1986-11-02 1991-08-27 Yamaha Hatsudoki Kabushiki Kaisha Motor vehicle
US4986493A (en) * 1988-01-05 1991-01-22 Branko Sarh Convertible fixed wing aircraft
US4881701A (en) * 1988-03-14 1989-11-21 Bullard Gary M Combination automobile and airplane
US5407245A (en) * 1988-11-07 1995-04-18 Daimler-Benz Ag Process and device for reducing the drag in the rear region of a vehicle, for example, a road or rail vehicle or the like
US5056860A (en) * 1989-04-06 1991-10-15 Fiat Auto S.P.A. High-performance motor car
US5146203A (en) * 1990-10-15 1992-09-08 Leonid Simuni Automobile for racing
US5259571A (en) * 1991-03-06 1993-11-09 Blazquez Jose M R Aircraft with gyroscopic stabilization system
US6230836B1 (en) * 1995-09-25 2001-05-15 Cke Technologies Inc. Aerodynamic automobile
US5833256A (en) * 1995-11-20 1998-11-10 Gilmore; Roger C. User powered vehicle and propulsion mechanism
US6129306A (en) * 1997-03-05 2000-10-10 Pham; Roger N. C. Easily-convertible high-performance roadable aircraft
US5924763A (en) * 1997-04-09 1999-07-20 Trac-Tech, Llc Wing assembly for drag racers
US6170847B1 (en) * 1997-06-10 2001-01-09 Roger N. C. Pham High performance fully-enclosed center-tracking vehicle
US6167829B1 (en) * 1997-10-09 2001-01-02 Thomas G. Lang Low-drag, high-speed ship
US6042052A (en) * 1998-09-25 2000-03-28 Smith; Donald E. Retractable step fairing for amphibian airplane
US6378932B1 (en) * 1999-03-18 2002-04-30 Daimlerchrysler Ag Motor vehicle with flow-influencing devices to reduce air resistance
US6896309B2 (en) * 2002-08-27 2005-05-24 Honda Giken Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Vehicle seat storage assisting apparatus

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20090304648A1 (en) * 2004-08-02 2009-12-10 Charles F. Owen Mast Cell Stabilizers to Prevent or Treat Laminitis

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US6994394B1 (en) 2006-02-07

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6857698B2 (en) Seat side impact resistance mechanism
US5746467A (en) Automatic safety car seat using tension springs
US8480111B1 (en) Enclosed motorcycle
CN101863238B (en) Translational energy-absorbing seat for protecting neck during rear-end collision
US20130187407A1 (en) Vehicle frame
DE4414432B4 (en) motor vehicle
CN103192748B (en) A kind of Novel seat descending-preventiomechanism mechanism
CN201304950Y (en) Automobile side-impact protection device
US6908128B2 (en) External protection system for a vehicle
CN112373568A (en) MPV lower vehicle body structure
DE1680055A1 (en) Motor vehicle
US6994394B1 (en) Automobile body performing decreased aerodynamic lift
WO1995031355A1 (en) Motor vehicle
US20040232727A1 (en) Automobile body having improved aerodynamic shape
CN209323442U (en) A kind of crash bearer of municipal works
GB2508709A (en) Passenger carrying vehicle
EP0559848B1 (en) Motor vehicle
US1275400A (en) Back-draft shield for vehicles.
WO2011034498A1 (en) Motorcycle with passenger compartment
DE102014012162A1 (en) AUTOMOBILE WITH A BODY AS A U-WING
JPS5943339B2 (en) car
JPH0568353U (en) Back frame
EP1632388B1 (en) A seat system for a vehicle
CN211567749U (en) Anti-bending structure of side plate of automobile seat cushion and buffer part thereof
CN219750124U (en) Anti-collision seat for civil aircraft

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
REMI Maintenance fee reminder mailed
LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
STCH Information on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362

FP Lapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date: 20100207