Airtabs - do they work?

Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by hatlesstrukr, Feb 16, 2013.

  1. Hammer166

    Hammer166 Crusty Information Officer

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    Fixed that for you.
     
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  3. eeb

    eeb Heavy Load Member

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    Well yeah, thanks.
     
  4. Blind Driver

    Blind Driver Road Train Member

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    I'm looking at a W900 across the parking lot with airtabs. I don't think they are doing much good considering the air cleaners and stacks sticking out in the air airstream......and he's pulling a flatbed :tard:
     
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  5. carrkool

    carrkool Heavy Load Member

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    I don't get it. people buy a truck with no hood to cut down on wind restriction but put tabs on that in my mind add wind restriction....I just don't get it...lol
     
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  6. Hammer166

    Hammer166 Crusty Information Officer

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    Yes the tabs create some drag, but the vortices they create prevent greater drag. The 'curtain' of air they generate prevents air from getting in the gap between truck and trailer, and keep the airflow attached to the trailer. It's an easily visible difference in the rain. And hauling cars around, I can tell you that the ones on the trailer greatly reduce the alternating vortices off the trailer corners. Those airtab vortices act just like the trailer tails by fooling the air into thinking the trailer has a tapered tail. That car over the hood does a fine job of catching turbulence and steering the nose, a non-existent issue behind an air tab equipped trailer.
     
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  7. Hammer166

    Hammer166 Crusty Information Officer

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    Not video, but a computer simulation.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 9, 2015
    FloTheWaitress, aiwiron and Dice1 Thank this.
  8. aiwiron

    aiwiron Road Train Member

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    I attempted to decrease the space between a box van and the cab, moved the fifth wheel forward two notches and ended up struggling to keep my axle weights legal. By moving the fifth wheel forward to notches it increased my fuel mileage .04 per gallon.
     
  9. eeb

    eeb Heavy Load Member

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    Installed correctly, airtabs will smooth that transition further and improve gains, and may allow you to reposition the fifthwheel without loosing your milage gains.
     
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  10. Blind Driver

    Blind Driver Road Train Member

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    The truck slips through the wind just fine, but has no idea what kind of trailer is behind it. Air Tabs may work well for directing air away from the void between the truck and a van. The vortexes that it creates keeps random air from entering the void.

    I want to see a real video. That's my demand and I'm sticking to it :geek:
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 9, 2015
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  11. aiwiron

    aiwiron Road Train Member

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    Same thing I was thinking, 99% of the time I can run my trailer up close since the loads are mostly 10-16K. I have them load it back with a spread configuration and the loads axle out very even and no where near illegal, but my back runs are always heavy and there goes fuel mileage x2. Weight and the distance of trailer to tractor.
     
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