stafford1500 said:
You may want to look for "Fluid Dynamic Drag" and it's companion "Fluid Dynamic Lift". Both are really just compilations of NACA/NASA/government research from way back, but still useful resources.
I'm taking the hint, and reading through the 'Trailing Edge Device' section of Fluid Dynamic Lift now, piecing together answers.
Interestingly enough... the device I'm fiddling with is probably going to be around 5" in chord, and on a NB miata (LOA = 155.7", Height = 48.4"). So, if we think of the car as the "profile"... then a 5" spoiler has a cf/c of 5"/155.7" = 3.2%
and taking away ground clearance (~6")... that means a miata has a maximum t/c ratio of .... 42.4/155.7 = 27%
so, if you start searching around on google for references to a 5% chord flap... you end up getting a lot of technical paper 'hits' on...
Gurney Flaps on race car wings. So, in some ways... a spoiler on a car is effectively a Gurney Flap... or perhaps vice-versa.
there's also a realization of how I'm funny. Hoerner's FDL is meant to collate a bunch of data, and plot it together in a concise way that was helpful for engineers to grab data off so they didn't have to plot it by hand... or go into the archives and find the company's one print off of A.M.O. Smith's AIAA #74-939, or whatever. But, in the 50 years since it was originally complied, computers have gotten powerful enough that re-plotting that data is basically "free". And, with the nature of the work I used to do with simulators, I have a fair amount of experience with curve-fitting raw data and extracting polynomial representations of it.
So, I'm at a place where I'm using a book, looking at graphs... and I kind of want to go hunt down the source material so that I can access the raw experimental data and make my own curves, because it's relatively easy to convert and approximation of that data into a formula.