AeroGT3 wrote:How about a grid independence study instead? Hypothesizing what error might be with math is great, but actually doing a case to find it better. What's the order of accuracy on this central differencing your doing?
CFD
is mathematics.
Getting one or two results on an individual study does not circumvent the maths behind it.
Its pish like that which leads to crap results resulting in CFD getting such unwarranted criticism.
Virtually all simulations done using 2 eqn RANS will be 2nd order, although some may have a hybrid of 1st upwind with 2nd order for improved stability.
Oh, and yes. I've seen massive differences in simulation quality going from wall function to low-Re modelling.
And even from going from a disc of 1.25 to 1.1.
The difference is mainly coming from the number of elements in the BL.
AeroGT3 wrote:
Dead wrong. Take a look at the image below. The middle wake is for what would be about 25M cells on a car. The lowest image about 120M cells. Care to point out how "wrong" the middle mesh (which later I used on a full car) is? What am I losing vs the bottom mesh, which is 4+ times the cell count?
Even with that most rudimentary method of comparison (the pretty picture that tells very little) there are differences in your pressure zones.
You produce some graphs of pressure along various Y locations (plotting pressure against spanwise location) and you'll see proper differences.
AeroGT3 wrote:
You are beyond completely missing mine. I know components are coupled. That's bloody obvious. My point is that you don't need an excessively find mesh to capture that coupling.
I believe that is incorrect.
And its is not an excessively fine mesh.
30mil is coarse.
AeroGT3 wrote:
Wrong again. Check out two papers presented at AIAA Aero conference in January of this year. On that exact topic . . . showed significant changes by changing what you claim makes no difference.
Can you name the papers?
If not, just give me the conference name and location.
AeroGT3 wrote:
That case wasn't using symmetry planes, so cut off half the cells there. How detailedly are they treating the brakes and heat transfer there? That could be 5+ million cells per axle a long if you're getting the entire caliper plus the innards of the discs all at y+ of 1.
I maintain that for external flow in a pure headwind 30M cells is adequate.
Oh right.
SO 30 million is ok as long as you only model the most rudimentary aspects of the car and do it in conditions which are of little actual use?
Very little F1 testing is pure headwind now - when do you need downforce in a straight line? Its all yaw, hence all needing the full car.