I thoroughly agree with SZ on this one. I think the CFD thing is a bit of good marketing rather than a revolution in practise. On Wirth Research's own website they state that
Wirth Research wrote:The company only uses Fluent solvers for its analysis.
Fluent is a good piece of software, but not revolutionary in any way. What Wirth has is experienced engineers who can interpret the results and have some feeling of what is right and wrong, however as SZ said without a wind tunnel it's hard to validate those assertions.
Even with a wind tunnel and excellent computing facilities you can get it wrong. BMW had all this at Hinwil for last season, but produced a dog, McLaren the same. The point being there is a lot more to building a car than aerodynamics and that is what CFD does, aerodynamics.
If Wirth had come out with "we have a excellent team of experienced race car designers", I would be much more convinced than "we have a big computer and Fluent".
EDIT: In addition it's not as if CFD designs the car. You build a model, test it, change it try another model. It's the skill of the user as to designing a model that can improve on the last one, nothing to do with the simulation (unless you have an awesome genetic algorithm and sole use of ORNL's Jaguar, maybe).