autogyro wrote:"What? Validate means to confirm, or verify, which is how we are using the word... and that is what marcush is saying. Do you have an actual stance on this, or are you just stirring the pot here?"
If it were possible to fully validate all the factors, there could only be one result.
The car would win.
Any other level of validation must include a percentage of guess work.
How then can you tell the difference?
If the pot is never stirred then we would still be racing steam cars on wooden wheels.
I really don't get how you CANT understand what validation means. You are doing it here and you have done it on the CFD thread. All it means is checking yours and the computers sums with reality to make sure they are correct.
It's possible to have your sums right and validated but a --- design. That means you are a bad engineer.
It's also possible that you dont valide the sums, and design to incorrect input data. This does not mean you are a bad engineer, jus tthat you were an idiot for not validating.
The third possiblity is that you fluke a good design on unvalidated data, and are hailed as a hero. This means you are a lucky sob.
PLEASE NOTE: These sums ARE NOT TRIVIAL. The answers have to be found experimentally.
I'll give you an example:
We come up with a computer model for how high a ball bounces after dropping.
We first VERIFY the model. This means you make sure it works correctly, and doesnt give a blantantly stupid answer. So if it says the ball bounces higher than you dropped it we know something is wrong.
After its verified to work. We then VALIDATE. This would involove dropping a real ball on to a real floow and measuring the results.
We then compare data. If the ball in the computer model bounces too low compared to the real ball, we know that some variables need tweaking to ge the model correct. We can then estimate model accuracy over a range, and come up with a domain that the model is valid for.
The above... is science.
Correct design decisions are an art.
Engineering is a beautiful mix of the two.