alelanza wrote:What's your take on this 'grounds effect resurgence' from Flavio talk we're getting? As i understand it it makes no sense and it's more of a Briatore thing, but still interested in your opinion.
TIA
Here http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/74034kilcoo316 wrote:alelanza wrote:What's your take on this 'grounds effect resurgence' from Flavio talk we're getting? As i understand it it makes no sense and it's more of a Briatore thing, but still interested in your opinion.
TIA
Where is the full quote... I haven't seen it.
diploma does not make you a good engineer, that comes with the experience.Conceptual wrote:Just imagine how many brilliant recent engineering grads that RBT could pick up for his salary.
vasia wrote:Certainly looks interesting, but I would not call it beautiful. The rear end is very elegant, but the front is ugly. I predict though it will be another 'typical' Newey design; fast but fragile. I also predict Red Bull will struggle to develop the car quick enough to keep pace with the competition.
Well, it is putting more emphasis on the floor, that is for sure.alelanza wrote:Here http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/74034
Thanks!kilcoo316 wrote:Well, it is putting more emphasis on the floor, that is for sure.alelanza wrote:Here http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/74034
Flavio is sort of right - this whole thing is a farce and should have been sorted out ages ago. The FIA should really have said no to Toyota, Williams & Brawn.
They should have simply stated there can be no vertical discontinuities in the diffuser surface. The wording would have been something like: "If a vertical line is taken downward from any part of the diffuser*, it cannot intersect with a second geometric surface".
*you would probably have to define it as a design box - i.e. behind the rear-wheel centre-line etc etc.
That leaves it impossible to include the transverse gaps (and the floor shadow plate) that the upper deck uses to extract air from under the floor.
It wasn't intended for that hole to exist.wesley123 wrote:i dont think they should have said the diffuser was illegal, as in the rules it is completely legal.
I tell you what,noname wrote:diploma does not make you a good engineer, that comes with the experience.Conceptual wrote:Just imagine how many brilliant recent engineering grads that RBT could pick up for his salary.
young guns could be smart and have interesting ideas but having them is one thing and putting them into reality is another. designing is an art of compromises and requires a lot of patience, and due that you need someone older and experienced to tell you "stop for a moment, look at this, think again, have you checked if..." and so on.
Sorry, but that is bullshit.Conceptual wrote:In the end, it is about solutions. Newey's experience locks him inside a box that the unexperienced guys don't have. Sometimes, having a fresh approach from step 1 allows for more interesting direction choices, where Newey and his experience skips him to step 2, thus losing the possibilities of revolutionary design.
I think that today's software removes the need for experience.kilcoo316 wrote:Sorry, but that is bullshit.Conceptual wrote:In the end, it is about solutions. Newey's experience locks him inside a box that the unexperienced guys don't have. Sometimes, having a fresh approach from step 1 allows for more interesting direction choices, where Newey and his experience skips him to step 2, thus losing the possibilities of revolutionary design.
This might sound incredibly arrogant, but if you were an engineer, you would know exactly how stupid your statement is.
There simply is no substitute for experience.
Those 5 engineering grads wouldn't have a f**king clue about what boundary conditions to use in a tunnel for testing. They wouldn't have a notion about the interaction of suspension & tyres on the front wing, and further back on the diffuser.
Or the exhausts, or the radiator inlets, or the airbox, particularly under engine retardation when its venting.
It doesn't matter how good you are. An engineering grad will never have the depth of experience, that databank of life to fall back on and base their decisions on.
I'm not that long out of uni, and believe me, the guys around me know a lot more than me, even though I have "better" academic qualifications than anyone else in the room.
As an engineer myself I couldn't say better what you have said. There is no and never will be any substitute for experience.kilcoo316 wrote:Sorry, but that is bullshit.Conceptual wrote:In the end, it is about solutions. Newey's experience locks him inside a box that the unexperienced guys don't have. Sometimes, having a fresh approach from step 1 allows for more interesting direction choices, where Newey and his experience skips him to step 2, thus losing the possibilities of revolutionary design.
This might sound incredibly arrogant, but if you were an engineer, you would know exactly how stupid your statement is.
There simply is no substitute for experience.
Those 5 engineering grads wouldn't have a f**king clue about what boundary conditions to use in a tunnel for testing. They wouldn't have a notion about the interaction of suspension & tyres on the front wing, and further back on the diffuser.
Or the exhausts, or the radiator inlets, or the airbox, particularly under engine retardation when its venting.
It doesn't matter how good you are. An engineering grad will never have the depth of experience, that databank of life to fall back on and base their decisions on.
I'm not that long out of uni, and believe me, the guys around me know a lot more than me, even though I have "better" academic qualifications than anyone else in the room.
Sure, but that is a fault of their education, and those are probably NOT in the top 1% that I spoke of.Agerasia wrote:As an engineer myself I couldn't say better what you have said. There is no and never will be any substitute for experience.kilcoo316 wrote:Sorry, but that is bullshit.Conceptual wrote:In the end, it is about solutions. Newey's experience locks him inside a box that the unexperienced guys don't have. Sometimes, having a fresh approach from step 1 allows for more interesting direction choices, where Newey and his experience skips him to step 2, thus losing the possibilities of revolutionary design.
This might sound incredibly arrogant, but if you were an engineer, you would know exactly how stupid your statement is.
There simply is no substitute for experience.
Those 5 engineering grads wouldn't have a f**king clue about what boundary conditions to use in a tunnel for testing. They wouldn't have a notion about the interaction of suspension & tyres on the front wing, and further back on the diffuser.
Or the exhausts, or the radiator inlets, or the airbox, particularly under engine retardation when its venting.
It doesn't matter how good you are. An engineering grad will never have the depth of experience, that databank of life to fall back on and base their decisions on.
I'm not that long out of uni, and believe me, the guys around me know a lot more than me, even though I have "better" academic qualifications than anyone else in the room.
I've had people who are fresh from degree's and out qualify me ask me something that I have always assumed to be something easy.
you are wrong. few months ago one of my guys (just graduated) told me he does not need knowledge because he has the computer and CAM/CAE software. I fired him, I had no choice.Conceptual wrote:I think that today's software removes the need for experience.
It isn't that hard to write auto-optimizing scripts for CATIA V5. Actually, I have a PM from a member here that was telling me about his Uni mate that had an optimizing script for a carburator inlet.
When todays computers can generate, model and compare THOUSANDS of iterations, you don't need experience to get to the solutions.