| This article was first published in 2004. | 
	
	
In this article we’ll be installing an 
undertray/spoiler that dramatically and measurably improves underbonnet 
intercooler and radiator efficiency. No, you don’t need a wind tunnel like the 
one above - just a cheap measuring instrument, some cardboard and sticky tape, 
and your local roads.
Last week
Undertrays, Spoilers & Bonnet Vents, Part 1
we introduced the idea that before air can flow, a 
pressure difference is needed. So for example, before air will pass through an 
intercooler or radiator, there needs to be a higher pressure on one side than 
the other. Even if the pressure is high on the front face of the radiator or 
intercooler, if it’s also high on the back face, no air will flow through it. 
In short, air exits are just as important as air entrances.
	 
	
	
	
In Part 1 of this series we left you with the information that the measured 
pressure increase on the front face of the guinea pig Maxima V6 Turbo’s 
underbonnet intercooler (air channelled to it by a bonnet scoop) was pretty well 
matched with the air pressure in the engine bay... which is where the intercooler 
air exit is. 
Of course in this situation, no airflow through the intercooler will be 
occurring....
Starting Point
	 
	
	
	
The whole desire to make some aerodynamic changes to the front of the car 
came about because when doing some other road testing, I’d had the standard 
undertray off the car. This design is in two small pieces, with one section 
hanging down low at the rear. I’d already found that when this undertray was 
tied upwards, the measured intake air temp rose as intercooler efficiency 
dropped (see Driving Emotion). 
But with the undertray removed completely, the performance of the intercooler 
and radiator seemed to go even further backwards.
It therefore seemed that some tweaking of the undertray had the potential to 
dramatically improve intercooler (and perhaps also radiator) efficiencies. But 
at this stage I had no idea what I was getting into – the data subsequently 
proved to be absolutely startling....
Underbonnet Measurements
	 
	
	
	
Using a Dwyer Magnehelic 0-1 inches of water gauge (see last week’s story for 
more on these gauges) I made measurements of the pressure under the bonnet of 
the Maxima. Two measuring locations were picked:
- against 
the underside of the bonnet, basically in the middle of the panel towards the 
rear
- near 
to the intercooler air outlet, which is towards the front left of the engine 
bay
The road speed for all the measurements was 80 km/h and the radiator and 
intercooler fans were not operating when the measurements were taken. 
(Interestingly, the underbonnet pressure measurably rises when the rad fans are 
working – they’re pushing more air into the space, you see.) 
The first measurements were taken with the standard undertray configuration, 
as shown in the pic above. As the table below shows, the pressure build-up in 
the engine bay at 80 km/h was 0.4 inches of water.
|  | Standard Undertrays | 
| Rear of bonnet | 0.4 inches | 
| Near intercooler | 0.4 inches | 
	 
	
	
	
The short factory undertrays were then removed, leaving an opening that 
allowed the road to be seen by peering down between the radiator and the engine. 
The table below shows the measurements that were taken. As can be seen, the 
pressure at the rear of the engine bay stayed the same at 0.4 inches but the 
pressure at the front of the engine bay (which is where the intercooler is 
mounted) rose to 0.5 inches of water. This explained why the rad and ‘cooler 
didn’t work as well with the small undertrays removed. 
|  | Standard Undertrays | No Undertrays | 
| Rear of bonnet | 0.4 inches | 0.4 | 
| Near intercooler | 0.4 inches | 0.5 | 
A test undertray was then fabricated from some plastic sheet that had once 
backed an advertising hoarding. The front of the trial undertray was held in 
place with cable ties connecting to the lower edge of the bumper and at the 
rear, by a wire that connected it to the anti-roll bar. The undertray was 
allowed to droop down at the rear, creating a gap that reached about 10cm in the 
middle. 
	 
	
	
	
This photo shows the test undertray in place.
The measurements taken with this undertray are shown in the table below. As 
can be seen, the pressures found towards the front of the engine bay are 
markedly altered by the presence and shape of the front undertray. Over having 
no undertray at all, the trial plastic undertray reduced the pressure in the 
front part of the engine bay by 40 per cent. Significantly, it was also much 
better than the standard undertrays, reducing the pressure build-up over them by 
25 per cent.
|  | Standard Undertray | No Undertrays | Plastic Undertray | 
| Rear of bonnet | 0.4 inches | 0.4 | 0.4 | 
| Near intercooler | 0.4 inches | 0.5 | 0.3 | 
	 
	
	
	
Next a spoiler lip was added to the undertray. The trial lip was formed from 
foam rubber and was 5 x 5cm, being attached to the undertray 15cm back from the 
leading edge. 
The measured results are shown in the table and graph below. Over the new 
undertray alone, the lip made no difference to the recorded pressure at the 
front of the engine bay but had a dramatic effect on the rear pressure – 
dropping it by 25 per cent. 
|  | Standard Undertray | No Undertrays | Plastic Undertray | Plastic Undertray with 
Spoiler | 
| Rear of bonnet | 0.4 inches | 0.4 | 0.4 | 0.3 | 
| Near intercooler | 0.4 inches | 0.5 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 
	 
	
	
	
So compared with standard, the new trial undertray and spoiler lip decreased 
the front and rear pressure engine bay build-ups by 25 per cent. Over having no 
undertray at all, the new combo dropped the front and rear underbonnet pressures 
by 25 per cent and 40 per cent, respectively. This major pressure drop 
(improving airflow through all the front-mounted heat exchangers) is especially 
important to consider if your car has no undertray.
	
	
		
			| Why They Worked – Maybe!Measuring that in fact these trial designs did work is far better than any theory 
– but what is likely to have been going on?  Firstly, the absence of any undertrays probably created turbulence under the 
engine bay. Despite turbulence often being characterised as ‘low pressure’ it 
can have the effect of preventing other airflows smoothly joining it. By having 
a relatively smooth undertray hanging down at the rear, air is accelerated 
between the undertray and the road, better drawing air out of the engine bay at 
the trailing rear edge of the undertray.  And the spoiler? Like nearly everything in car aerodynamics, this partly 
contradicts what was just said – the spoiler is likely to have created a 
slightly lower pressure behind it, either by changing the effective shape of the 
undertray or by causing localised high speed turbulence. | 
	
	
Intercooler Measurements
The measurements taken so far were referenced against cabin pressure – with 
the windows open, effectively the same as ambient. However, because I wanted to 
achieve a specific outcome (better airflow through the radiator and especially the intercooler) I decided 
to do some more measurements. These were to be true differential measurements – 
that is, carried out by running two sensing tubes from the measuring instrument 
to either side of the intercooler and then measuring the actual pressure 
difference across the core.
And what an eye-opener these measurements were! Remember, the higher the 
pressure difference across the intercooler, the more air that will be flowing 
through it.
|  | No Undertrays | New Plastic Undertray | New Plastic Undertray with 
Spoiler | 
| Intercooler Pressure Differential | Minus 0.1 inches | 0 | 0.1 inches | 
	 
	
	
	
The table above and this graph show that without any undertrays in place, the 
air from under the bonnet is likely to have been flowing out through the bonnet scoop! That is, 
there was a measured higher pressure under the intercooler than on top, even at 
80 km/h! No bloody wonder intake air temps went up in this configuration – the 
air was coming in through the radiator, being heated, then passing through the 
intercooler and out the forward-facing bonnet scoop! 
I had had a pre-heater happening, 
not an intercooler...
With my mock-up plastic undertray in place, the pressure at 80 km/h was the 
same top and bottom of the intercooler. That is, no airflow through the core 
would have been occurring.
And with the trial plastic undertray and the foam rubber spoiler, I had a 
very small positive differential of 0.1 inches – the pressure was a little 
higher on top than underneath.
Hmmmmm.
This was serious food for thought. When the intercooler fan is off, the flow 
through the intercooler core is lousy – sometimes backwards, even.
I then made a cardboard undertray that I fitted under the intercooler side of 
the engine bay. I replicated the foam rubber spoiler with more cardboard, then 
went for a drive. The resulting pressure differential was zero... unless I was in the turbulent wake of 
another car, where it was 0.1 inches! Yes, incredible as it sounds, the 
intercooler airflow was clearly being affected by other vehicles – in this case, 
when following another vehicle, it got better.
This was all getting seriously involved, so rather than spend more time on 
mock-ups, I decided to start work on the real thing.
	
	
		
			| Prototyping...By far the easiest way of assessing aero changes is to make quick and easy 
mock-ups of proposed undertray shapes out of cardboard and/or sheet plastic, 
cable ties and sticky tape. It might attract some interested looks from 
passers-by, but in five minutes of on-road pressure testing you can prove or 
disprove a design.  Not mentioned in the main text is another front-end shape that was trialled – 
a straight up/down spoiler so low that it scraped on the ground. Despite 
preventing lots of airflow under the car, the pressure differential across the 
intercooler remained at zero. So this quickly showed that there was no point in 
going for a deep front spoiler - it didn’t work.  Incidentally, that goes against nearly all the textbook wisdom... | 
	
	
The New Undertray
Undertrays of this sort can be made from a variety of materials, including 
fibreglass, ABS plastic, polycarbonate (Lexan) 
or marine plywood. I chose ABS – a tough plastic that can be bent when heated 
and is easily drilled, sanded and cut. I bought a half-sheet offcut from a 
plastics shop for AUD$28. (To find outlets selling a variety of types of plastic 
sheet, look up ‘plastics’ in the Yellow Pages.)
	 
	
	
	
I won’t take you through every design iteration made with the ABS, but after 
hours of constructing and testing, constructing and testing, I struck gold. With 
the short undertray configured as shown here (flush with the lower bumper at the 
front, angled slightly downwards and open at the rear, and with the sides 
sealed-off with angled folded panels), the measured pressure differential across 
the intercooler skyrocketed to 0.3 inches of water at 80 km/h. 
|  | No Undertrays | Plastic Undertray | Plastic Undertray with 
Spoiler | Final Undertray | 
| Intercooler Pressure Differential | Minus 0.1 inches | 0 | 0.1 inches | 0.3 inches | 
	 
	
	
	
In the above table and on this graph you can see what an incredible change 
that is – no less than a 400 per cent improvement over having no undertray at 
all! Over the worse-case scenario (ie no undertrays) the intake cruise air temp 
on a 30 degree C day also dropped from 65 to 47 degrees C.... Yes, the intercooler 
was now working – even without the fan on!
So could the pressure difference be improved even further with the addition 
of a spoiler? The answer was ‘no’. Despite trialling lip spoilers in different 
positions and of different heights on the undertray, no significant gain in 
pressure across the intercooler could be made with this version of the 
undertray.
And what about underbonnet pressures – the starting point of the measuring 
process? 
|  | Standard Undertrays | New Undertray | 
| Rear of  bonnet | 0.4 inches | 0.4 inches | 
| Near intercooler | 0.4  | 0.1 inches | 
Towards the front of the engine bay the underbonnet pressure has been reduced 
by 75 per cent, from 0.4 inches down to 0.1 inches (both at 80 km/h). However 
the final version of the undertray does not reduce pressures towards the rear of 
the engine bay at all. To a large extent, getting a big pressure decrease at the 
front of the engine bay is far more important on this car than at the rear – the 
intercooler and radiator are both mounted near the front of the car and so have 
their exit air exhausting at this position. (Of course, a car with a top-mount 
intercooler mounted over - or behind - the engine may be a completely different 
kettle of fish!)
Conclusion
	 
	
	
	
This series is entitled ‘Undertrays, Spoilers & Bonnet Vents’ but there 
isn’t going to be a front spoiler. As indicated above, several versions were 
trialled but they were not effective at increasing the pressure difference 
across the intercooler, while at the same time they reduced ground clearance. 
However, the simple undertray (well, simple now that all the work has been 
done!) makes a radical difference to the airflow passing through the intercooler 
– an increase in airflow that measurably drops cruise intake air temps. 
(If the 
car didn’t run an intercooler fan which comes on at low road  speeds and also when intercooler 
temps are high, the new undertray would also have dropped peak intake 
air temps considerably.) 
In addition, it is noticeable that the radiator fans 
(being monitored by a LED inside the cabin) don’t operate nearly as often as 
previously – basically, if the car is moving on the flat, the fans stay off, 
whatever the outside temp. IOTW, the radiator is now working much better.
Playing with different undertrays and front spoilers can result in 
significantly increased intercooler (and radiator) efficiencies. However, if 
you’re not measuring actual aerodynamic pressures, you’re working in the dark – 
even apparently minor changes in design can yield major changes in aerodynamic 
flows.
Next week – fitting the bonnet 
vents