| This article was first published in 2004. | 
	
	
All modern car designs have spent thousands of hours in the wind tunnel while 
the engineers refined and altered, tested and assessed. But contrary to popular 
belief, many of those hours weren’t used to create a body shape with great drag 
and lift figures. Instead the engineers were spending the time optimising the 
cooling system airflows - making sure that plenty of air reached the radiator(s) 
and could then leave without obstruction. 
The average modified car is very different. Perhaps there’s a randomly 
designed bodykit in place and there might also be added bonnet (hood) vents. But 
there’s invariably not a lot of rhyme or reason to it all - sometimes 
directional vents are put in backwards, while others intended to let air in are 
almost certainly letting air out.  Aftermarket undertrays? Well, while 
there’s plenty of discussion on web groups about them, fitting and then testing 
their effectiveness is almost unknown.
So is it possible to design, install and test front aero aids that achieve 
something that’s worthwhile? It sure is. In this series we take a detailed look 
at designing and fitting a front undertray, front spoiler, and bonnet vents. 
These were aimed at improving the airflow through the front heat exchangers – 
radiator, oil cooler, air con condenser, intercooler and power steering cooler. 
(In this article we’ll concentrate on intercooler flows, but the others apply 
just as much.) 
The whole exercise proved to be a learning experience in more ways than one - 
like finding out that at some speeds, the guinea pig car’s underbonnet 
intercooler had in fact, zero outside airflow through it... Surely not? – but 
that’s the truth.
But let’s start at the beginning.
Pressures
Air will only flow if there is a pressure differential. This is a really 
important point to grasp – air doesn’t pass through the radiator just because 
the car is moving forward. Instead, there needs to be a higher pressure in front 
of the radiator and a lower pressure 
behind it – that is, a difference in pressure. 
To better understand this, imagine that the engine bay is sealed off top and 
bottom. (In most cases it is sealed 
off at the top by the bonnet, but there are usually openings around the engine 
to allow air to flow out under the car - but here we’ll think about a car with a 
totally sealed engine bay.) 
	 
	
	
	
The car with the sealed engine bay moves forward and air initially flows in 
through the radiator. 
	 
	
	
	
However, without any escape route, the engine bay soon ‘fills up’ with air, 
until the pressures either side of the radiator become equal. Now, no more air 
will flow through the radiator.
	 
	
	
	
With the normal openings beneath the engine, some air can flow out. The 
pressure build-up in the engine bay is therefore reduced, although it may be 
still higher than ambient.
	 
	
	
	
With extra exit vents in the bonnet preventing any build-up in engine bay 
pressure, best flow through the radiator is gained. (Of course, you can 
substitute ‘intercooler’ or ‘oil cooler’ for radiator, if in fact their exit 
flows are also into the engine bay.)
So the airflow through a radiator doesn’t depend on the pressure in front of 
the core; it depends on the pressure difference across the core. IOTW, the 
air exit is just as important as the air entrance – if the air exits aren’t big 
enough (or the airflow doesn’t pas through them quickly enough), pressure will 
build up on the downstream side of the heat exchanger, decreasing the flow 
that’s occurring through it.
In this application, the primary purpose of front spoilers, undertrays and 
bonnet exit vents is to lower the pressure build-up inside the engine bay, so 
increasing the pressure differential across the heat exchangers (rad, 
intercooler, etc). 
	
	
		
			| Intake Vents?
	 
	 Bonnet entrance vents – eg to an intercooler – are located and shaped to 
build-up a positive pressure on one side of the heat exchanger. For example, 
this Impreza WRX uses a very large forward-facing scoop to cause increased air 
pressure on the top surface of the intercooler. If at the same time there is a 
lower pressure on the other side of the ‘cooler, air flows through it. However, 
this in turn directs more airflow into the underbonnet space, creating an even 
greater need for a lot of exit flow capability.  So if you’ve added a bonnet scoop to pick up air – or you have enlarged the 
standard scoop – it’s quite possible that there’s a pressure build-up under the 
bonnet which is dropping the efficiency of your radiator, intercooler, oil 
cooler and/or air-conditioning condenser. Get rid of that pressure build-up and all of the above will work 
better... | 
	
	
Measuring Instruments
This discussion of pressures rather than flow all sounds very scientific – “I 
am sure he’s right, but what the hell?” However, when I tell you that it’s very 
easy to actually measure these 
pressures on a moving car so you can see what’s really going on, it all becomes 
a heap more relevant. 
There are two instruments that can be used to measure these pressure 
variations. One is a Magnehelic gauge and the other, a manometer. (You can’t use 
a normal pressure gauge like a turbo boost gauge because the pressures are very 
small.) 
	 
	
	
	
Magnehelic gauges are made by the US company, 
Dwyer. They are designed to measure both positive and negative pressures, and so 
have two measuring ports. By using both ports simultaneously it’s easy to 
measure pressure differentials – just what is wanted in this application. 
Magnehelic gauges can be bought new from Dwyer, or alternatively, secondhand. 
eBay is a good way of buying these gauges very cheaply – expect to pay about 
US$15-25 for one. When buying a Magnehelic gauge, select a gauge that measures 
up to a maximum of about 3 inches of water. (The 3-inch gauge lets you use it in 
other applications as well – see below. If you intend using it purely for 
aerodynamic work, buy a 0-1 inch gauge like the one shown here.)
	
	
		
			| Other Uses?Magnehelic gauges are extremely useful in car modification. They can be 
additionally used to measure flow restriction throughout the intake system, 
including pressure drops across intercoolers and the air filter. For more on these 
techniques, do an AutoSpeed site search under ‘Magnehelic’. | 
	
	
	 
	
	
	
Instead of a Magnehelic gauge you can use a water manometer. A manometer 
simply consists of a U-shaped clear plastic tube, partly filled with a liquid 
(usually water with food colouring in it). You can easily make your own by using 
some plastic hose and a plywood or particle board backing. 
	 
	
	
	
Each arm of the manometer is connected to the pressures being measured. The 
fluid in the manometer then moves in response to this pressure difference – the 
more it moves, the greater the pressure difference. The actual pressure change 
can be indicated by measuring the difference in height of the two fluid columns. 
For example, if their levels are vertically 1 inch apart, you are measuring a 
pressure differential of 1 inch of water. 
To make the manometer more sensitive, you can incline it at a fixed angle. If 
the manometer is angled at 30 degrees from the horizontal, a difference in level of 1 inch (measured 
along the tubes) becomes an actual ‘inches of water’ measurement of 0.5 inches. 
In this way, very small pressure differences can be easily read off, even in a 
moving car. (Of course, you should use an assistant to read the manometer.) 
Note that while I have spoken throughout this series of measurements in 
inches of water, it’s usually not worth making the measurements in actual units 
– it’s a lot easier to just put arbitrary makings on the manometer backing board 
so you can see relative changes.
The only downside of the home-built manometer is that its orientation must be 
kept fixed (eg vertically or at a constant angle) and very small pressure 
differences are hard to measure. 
	
	
		
			| More on Manometers
U-shaped 
manometers are also commercially available. Some use liquids that are less dense 
than water, so providing an expanded scale that still reads in ‘inches of 
water’.  
Make 
sure that the pressure differential is never so great that the water all ends up 
in one arm of the U-tube. If this occurs, you need a taller manometer with more 
water in it. 
A 
home-built manometer can be a very sensitive instrument, capable of showing 
pressure differences of just 0.01 psi. So despite the simplicity of the 
instrument, don’t think for a moment that it is a poor relation. | 
	
	
Making Measurements
The first measurements that you should make are of the pressures under the 
bonnet. Leaving one arm of the manometer open to the pressure inside the car, 
connect a tube from the other arm to the underbonnet area. You can temporarily 
stick the open end of the tube to the underside of the bonnet with masking tape. 
If you are using a Magnehelic gauge, connect the sensing tube to the ‘high’ 
port and leave the other port open.
Then drive the car and watch what happens on the measuring instrument. 
	 
	
	
	
On the guinea pig car – a Nissan Maxima V6 Turbo with an added bonnet scoop 
for the side-mount intercooler – the underbonnet pressure rise was considerable. 
For example, at 80 km/h there was no less than 0.4 inches of water pressure 
build-up in the engine bay. Given that we have previously measured a pressure in 
the intercooler scoop of 0.4 inches of water at this speed, it looks very much 
like the air movement through the intercooler (without the intercooler fan 
working) is zero. That's because the pressure either side of the intercooler core is the same.
It’s worth repeating that: first measurements indicate that the Maxima’s 
underbonnet intercooler is getting no outside airflow through it when its fan 
isn’t running, even at high road speeds. OUCH!
You can see why all this stuff is pretty damn’ important to car 
performance...
Next week: testing, building and fitting a 
front undertray/spoiler.