If the shape with the least air-resistance is a raindrop ๐Ÿ’ง, why are most cars shaped like a backwards raindrop? ๐Ÿš—

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I am basing my question off this [image](https://study.com/cimages/multimages/16/dragcoefficients8851096396303799158.png)

Edit: Okay, okay, I should have said “teardrop” instead of “raindrop.” Talking about the *actual* shape of raindrops doesn’t really help given the visuals I provided.

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Along with everyone elseโ€™s points, keep in mind that topology plays a part. That raindrop is a single solid object whereas a car can have air got through the grill, engine bay, cabin, etc. The most aerodynamic solution becomes infinitely more complex based off that alone.

On top of that, thereโ€™s value in the air resistance. If you want performance, you need to generate downforce to stay on the road and maintain grip. If you donโ€™t counter air resistance enough, at higher speeds, youโ€™re losing grip, potentially lowering power output, potentially even generating some degree of lift which could lead to lack of control. In essence, the physics might say itโ€™s a good idea, but the engineering and economics say itโ€™s a bad idea.

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