mhiscox
Exp. Leader Emeritus
There are lots of people, and lots of expertise on the Portal, so I'm sure we must have dozens of aerodynamanics experts. Or perhaps at least one.
Here's the problem . . .
Earthroamer built the XV-JPs cabin with an extension that goes over the cab, and then replaced the remaining section of the Wrangler roof with a fiberglass panel. It looks like this from the front:

and like this from the side:
.
The gap between the top of the roof panel over the cockpit and the bottom of the cabin overhang is about an inch and a half.

and there are some front-to-back ridges molded into the fiberglass roof.

So . . . here's the problem: When the truck is headed at 50 mph or more into a quartering wind, or when there is a crosswind, there's occasionally, not always, a loud variable banshee-type howl that sounds as if it's the result of air turbulence right above the roof. Not just buffeting, more of a screechy noise. The noise is not present with a tailwind, dead calm, or when headed straight into the wind (when you just get the basic barndoor-into-the-wind rumble).
So I'm thinking I need to do something to change the flow of the air getting stuck under that overhang. My thought was to stick maybe four heavy rubber strips, about 3/4 inch tall and an inch wide, longitudinally at even intervals on the rooftop. But I've no reason for this strategy, except that it should change something.
If someone out there has an idea to tame the noise that's based on something more efficient than my rank experimentation, I'd be eager to hear it.
Here's the problem . . .
Earthroamer built the XV-JPs cabin with an extension that goes over the cab, and then replaced the remaining section of the Wrangler roof with a fiberglass panel. It looks like this from the front:

and like this from the side:

The gap between the top of the roof panel over the cockpit and the bottom of the cabin overhang is about an inch and a half.

and there are some front-to-back ridges molded into the fiberglass roof.

So . . . here's the problem: When the truck is headed at 50 mph or more into a quartering wind, or when there is a crosswind, there's occasionally, not always, a loud variable banshee-type howl that sounds as if it's the result of air turbulence right above the roof. Not just buffeting, more of a screechy noise. The noise is not present with a tailwind, dead calm, or when headed straight into the wind (when you just get the basic barndoor-into-the-wind rumble).
So I'm thinking I need to do something to change the flow of the air getting stuck under that overhang. My thought was to stick maybe four heavy rubber strips, about 3/4 inch tall and an inch wide, longitudinally at even intervals on the rooftop. But I've no reason for this strategy, except that it should change something.
If someone out there has an idea to tame the noise that's based on something more efficient than my rank experimentation, I'd be eager to hear it.