hi>
I would like to know what type of engineering should i study to work on aerodynamics of a racecars?
I read that Mike Gascoyne studied fluid mechanics and Newey studied Aeronautics
Thanks
But aren't these "Junior/Graduate" positions much "lower" positions? As I understand it, these graduate positions are essentially nightshift wind tunnel test mules.SLC wrote:Aeronautical Engineering. F1 teams, at least for UK based employement, prefer Imperial College London, Southampton University and Cambridge. And you can quite easily land a job in an F1 aero department with simply a Master's degree in Aero, with no experience or F1 related phd necessary - look out for the multitude of "graduate" and "junior" aerodynamicists positions that are very frequently advertised in Autosport.
You gotta start somewhere...AeroGT3 wrote:But aren't these "Junior/Graduate" positions much "lower" positions? As I understand it, these graduate positions are essentially nightshift wind tunnel test mules.SLC wrote:Aeronautical Engineering. F1 teams, at least for UK based employement, prefer Imperial College London, Southampton University and Cambridge. And you can quite easily land a job in an F1 aero department with simply a Master's degree in Aero, with no experience or F1 related phd necessary - look out for the multitude of "graduate" and "junior" aerodynamicists positions that are very frequently advertised in Autosport.