I should add that I now have a 5.7 Hemi in my little Jeep, so head winds should no longer be a problem when pulling the camper!
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Having walked on a shoulder and passed by 18 wheelers I can report there is not only the "big" wind, but, a couple seconds later, a gentler "after-wind". I feel good when I'm the requisite 2.5 seconds following distance, and the car's rocking a little. Figure I'm given a few MPH headwind. Science? None.
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Come to mention it, I have experienced the buffetting. In my motorhome, when a semi passes me and pulls in relatively close in front of me, my motorhome will shake left and right until the truck gets farther ahead.
Maybe so. If a 3000 pound car gets a 4 mpg boost off a 40,000 pound truck, then the truck's reduction is probaby at most 0.3 mpg. The bicycle drafting a semi would definitely be the space probe effect.Quote:
As far as the economy loss to the semi ..I kinda think it's along the lines of how much Jupiter loses when a probe does some gravity acceleration maneuver.
You have a good point. It really depends on what the following vehicle does to the aerodynamics of the truck. And chances are it won't do any thing harmful. More likely perhaps that it could improve the aerodynamics by smoothing out the airflow off the back of the truck. So maybe the truck being followed would actually get a slight mileage improvement, though likely insignificant.Quote:
Can someone please explain to me the physics that cause the truck's mileage to drop when it's being followed? I honestly can't see it.