Ever since that, David Penner, together with three anonymous F1 aerodynamicists, has been working on running CFD simulations on the model. This is what he wrote:
This is what Aerodynamicist 2 said about the results:At the start of this F1 season, Williams mistakenly released a model of their current car, the FW43B, to the public via a mobile app of theirs. While this model had some issues, it's the most accurate model of an F1 car that the public as ever had access to, and with a bit of work, can be used for CFD. Given how secretive F1 engineering is, this has opened the door for the public to finally start to see how F1 aerodynamics works, which is something I've been working on in the background for the last 7 months.
This is the first of 3 planned articles as I work toward "proper" results, and is entirely on the CFD methodology I'm using on this car. CFD is hard, and I'm not qualified to know if my results look good or not, so I've consulted with a number of ex-F1 aerodynamicists to critique my methods, and to identify areas with questionable accuracy.
Enjoy!
This is by far the best and most realistic CFD of an F1 car I have seen available to the public. Miles better than the old Perrin car CFD.
This is incredible work by David, read the full article here:Without comparisons to wind tunnel deltas I can’t be certain that this model is useful but, in some areas like mesh quality, it looks even better than the CFD we had at my former team. I can’t wait to see what comes of the second and third articles.
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