Not really mesh, more to do with scenarios, as you call them. I think they are usually called car attitudes. I don't think Merc forgot how to mesh the car.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑12 Mar 2024, 19:04Agreed. Very poor, or low quality racing scanarios combined with the CFD mesh of the car from front to back as it goes through these scenarios it whats I think they behind in.
Imagine the car in roll and yaw through a high speed turn, with all the tyredeflections, tyre squirt, heat from the brakes etc... I bet their mesh is not capturing all that!
Floors are trully massive and they generate 75-80% of the overall downforce now. They are also more susceptible to suspension movements generated by bumps, kerbs, roll, pitch and of course they are more suscpetible to yaw losses. Unlike all cars from 1983 to 2021, these floor losses are now bigger compared to optimal performance level and the floor itself is 50% more important now than a few years ago. So some cases of the car on track may now cost 10-15% of overall downforce instead of 3-5% like before.
I believe there are many such cases now, especially with raised floor edges since last year, and I believe teams may now need to validate one single design in about 50-100% more different initial CFD cases before going for further, more detailed cases and finally WT validation before approving a design for manufacture. This consumes a lot of CFD resources and teams need to be smart about using them, especially if there's a geometry model that doesn't offer substantial improvement, or worse. It's easy to fall into a trap of doing 5-6 initial CFD cases and waste an update (or a new car bodywork package) because you hoped corner curting won't go unpunished.