marcush. wrote:so come on guys no input here ?
MGP has just made the step to 60 % in the midst of the 2012 season.Why would you do that ? They did not have to build a new tunnel for this as their tunnel is made for full scale testing since 2006...very mysterious .
Is you question (1) why would you do that at all or (2) why did they do this only now?
I don't have special insight into the team but my guesses are:
1) Because size (and wind speed) DOES matter a lot. That guy who claimed a 100% tunnel isn't a huge boon is talking out of his ass and clearly never worked in aero simulation (whatever kind) before. Because the air does behave quite differently under different parameters and you can't always predict in what ways. (E.g. the switch to a turbulent boundary layer, stalling, etc.) In this case, the most important one will probably be the relation of viscuous and inertial influences, aka the Reynolds number. You can't just slap a scaling factor on it, since these dependencies are non-linear. A switch from 50% to 60% is huge and it will definitely give them better results.
2) Probably because it either cost too much time or money to do it before or because they now realised that they do indeed need to make the step. Maybe they had to re-meassure a huge number of models to re-calibrate their wind tunnel and it just wasn't worth stoping all aero development in the mean time. They had been having big problems with correlating their wind tunnel data with the real world and only fairly recently got on top of that, so the switch might have seemed to be a big risk.