No inner template for the engine inlet, this was omitted for simplicity. There has been an extra point added to K4.3 stating that there must be a plausible volume for engine inlet air to reach the engine, like at the end of K4.2.CAEdevice wrote:A question about the engine inlets: is there any inner template?
I still have the "pvbatch can not be found" error that I mentioned previously, even by installing Paraview 3.98 in the x64 folder (I have the latest Paraview version in the x64 folder). I would like to try that CFD package to see how different the results are with the software I am using so I can calibrate things a bit.julien.decharentenay wrote:Where is ParaView 3.98 installed? In my case it is installed in (and it is found automatically):CAEdevice wrote:Hi Julien,
I was using Paraview 4.1, so after unistalling it, I installed Paraview 3.98.
In that case the simulation stoppes after a few seconds: "pvbatch can not be found"
Code: Select all
C:\Program Files (x86)\ParaView 3.98.0
I am glad that the divergence trapping does work. I am working on a very similar issue at the moment - which is preventing me from releasing the next version. I hope to be able to get past it as it has been bugging me for a few days now (and for some reason the meshing is not working either)... Can you confirm whether you are using inlet and exhaust - at this stage I would recommend not using these?CAEdevice wrote:I obtained a different problem during running: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/522 ... rgence.txt
The STL is the same of the previous test (the one completed without refinement).
Hi, I confirm that I'm not using exhaust and that units are meters.julien.decharentenay wrote:I am glad that the divergence trapping does work. I am working on a very similar issue at the moment - which is preventing me from releasing the next version. I hope to be able to get past it as it has been bugging me for a few days now (and for some reason the meshing is not working either)... Can you confirm whether you are using inlet and exhaust - at this stage I would recommend not using these?CAEdevice wrote:I obtained a different problem during running: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/522 ... rgence.txt
The STL is the same of the previous test (the one completed without refinement).
Two things you might be able to check:
(1) dimensions of the STL, which should show up in the log file. These should be in meters.
(2) ensure that the STL mesh does not have holes. I use netfabb Basic to check the mesh and fix issues. It does help in quite a few cases.
Can the plausible path for this engine inlet go through the cockpit template? What I am seeing here is that the engine inlet on top of the cockpit can be located quite far up front (making it sit over the cockpit template). Therefore is this accepted?cdsavage wrote:No inner template for the engine inlet, this was omitted for simplicity. There has been an extra point added to K4.3 stating that there must be a plausible volume for engine inlet air to reach the engine, like at the end of K4.2.CAEdevice wrote:A question about the engine inlets: is there any inner template?
4.3 is installed in Program Files x64 (aka Program Files), and 3.98.1 is installed in Program Files x86, and both have the pvbatch.exe in the bin directory.julien.decharentenay wrote:@MadMatt Can you let me know which directory ParaView is installed and check that there is an executable called pvbatch.exe in the bin directory? I am slightly surprised as the software should only check whether the file exists...
No, the 'plausible path' must be inside the bodywork but excluding the space taken up by the cockpit template.MadMatt wrote:Can the plausible path for this engine inlet go through the cockpit template? What I am seeing here is that the engine inlet on top of the cockpit can be located quite far up front (making it sit over the cockpit template). Therefore is this accepted?cdsavage wrote:No inner template for the engine inlet, this was omitted for simplicity. There has been an extra point added to K4.3 stating that there must be a plausible volume for engine inlet air to reach the engine, like at the end of K4.2.CAEdevice wrote:A question about the engine inlets: is there any inner template?
Originally One-Click CFD required the ground plane at z = 0 but I believe this is being changed.CAEdevice wrote:I'm running a new simulation with a different geometry file (new structure tree, I have the idea that something goes wrong with the names (given to bodies/surfaces or to assembly components?)
I have to questions about the PPT document.
1) The distance between the ground and the reference surface is 40mm?
2) Is there a distance along the y direction (ex. from the origin to the FW axis)?
The PPT images about CAD orientation are confused about the Y direction (+ or - ?) and the part names in the image are not the same or the previous text explanation.
Sorry to hear that. Have you had a look at the starter parts? Are there any other pre-built parts in particular that we could supply to make it easier to get started? Any rules that you're finding particularly annoying/difficult?RicME85 wrote:Think I am not going to bother with this year.
Have sat down and started working on a car about 10 times in the last month and so far have a blank file.
Just not getting my head around things and not enjoying it.
I thought LMP style regs would be interesting buy its just not working for me.