bhallg2k wrote:The problem isn't so much the wind tunnel itself as it is the correlation between the wind tunnel, CFD applications and the real world. If testing results from any one of those mediums produce data that doesn't sync with the other two, the design team then is essentially rendered blind. How can a design progress if CFD analysis says something will work but reality says otherwise?
Ok, I hear you.
But here's the thing I don't quite get. Windtunnel and/or CFD doesn't make a car quicker. The aero engineers' designs and parts do. Obviously Ferrari have still been bringing parts to the car - their travails with the Singapore/Suzuka rear wing have been well documented.
So say your CFD and windtunnel isn't correlating. Sure, you're updating a bit blind - but obviously parts are still getting manufactured and put on the car, without the benefit of CFD/windtunnel validation. But back before CFD and/or windtunnels were used in F1 - people still updated their cars, and while some upgrades didn't work, some did. Why is it that in Ferrari's case, most aren't? Obviously this is indicative of them actually NOT DESIGNING GOOD PARTS, rather than indicative of the windtunnel. Had they had a better, working CFD and windtunnel kit, then the difference would just be that CFD and the windtunnel (and not the track) tells the engineers that the part was bad.
I hope I'm making my question clear. CFD and windtunnel are not essential in making an actual working upgrade - they help, they expedite the process, but they won't make the car quicker.
richard_leeds wrote:You're not far from the truth, the problem is due to the air. Wind tunnels are fiendishly difficult to calibrate at the level of detail needed by F1. We're talking about scale models so size effects come into play, plus there is the difficulty of getting nice smooth air flow to mimic a car driving in the open, add in the effects from the edge and roof of the tunnel, the pulse of the fan, changing temperature & humidity. Then add in try to mimic the undulations of the car driving on a real track, ie pitch, yaw and roll.
Having spent a fortune to replicate nice laminar air flow and a rolling road, they also need to consider that the air on a track is turbulent due to other cars in front.
It's not easy
To be fair - that's a problem all wind tunnels probably have, and not Ferrari-specific.