I see $$$ and a widening gap for the top spenders if the cost cap isn't put into place.SectorOne wrote: ↑08 Dec 2018, 10:59Unlimited CFD for 2021? Should be interesting.
http://www.racecar-engineering.com/arti ... mited-cfd/
I see $$$ and a widening gap for the top spenders if the cost cap isn't put into place.SectorOne wrote: ↑08 Dec 2018, 10:59Unlimited CFD for 2021? Should be interesting.
http://www.racecar-engineering.com/arti ... mited-cfd/
There's not much detail in that article as to what this may be... I read it as a situation like the development for the 2019 rules where teams were allowed to run CFD outside their normal car development to feedback data to FOM/FIA on the progress of the rules. So FOM/FIA will send teams a draft rule or a particular geometry which they're free to simulate so that the FIA know what sort of numbers and wake profiles teams may be getting - but beyond the definitive rules for 2021 the CFD limits are back in effect. I could be wrong though (and I usually am).dren wrote: ↑10 Dec 2018, 14:32I see $$$ and a widening gap for the top spenders if the cost cap isn't put into place.SectorOne wrote: ↑08 Dec 2018, 10:59Unlimited CFD for 2021? Should be interesting.
http://www.racecar-engineering.com/arti ... mited-cfd/
Would most teams be using openFoam with custom solvers?jjn9128 wrote: ↑10 Dec 2018, 14:56There's not much detail in that article as to what this may be... I read it as a situation like the development for the 2019 rules where teams were allowed to run CFD outside their normal car development to feedback data to FOM/FIA on the progress of the rules. So FOM/FIA will send teams a draft rule or a particular geometry which they're free to simulate so that the FIA know what sort of numbers and wake profiles teams may be getting - but beyond the definitive rules for 2021 the CFD limits are back in effect. I could be wrong though (and I usually am).dren wrote: ↑10 Dec 2018, 14:32I see $$$ and a widening gap for the top spenders if the cost cap isn't put into place.SectorOne wrote: ↑08 Dec 2018, 10:59Unlimited CFD for 2021? Should be interesting.
http://www.racecar-engineering.com/arti ... mited-cfd/
Nope. Most (maybe all...) teams use Star.wpsiatwin wrote: ↑11 Dec 2018, 21:07Would most teams be using openFoam with custom solvers?jjn9128 wrote: ↑10 Dec 2018, 14:56There's not much detail in that article as to what this may be... I read it as a situation like the development for the 2019 rules where teams were allowed to run CFD outside their normal car development to feedback data to FOM/FIA on the progress of the rules. So FOM/FIA will send teams a draft rule or a particular geometry which they're free to simulate so that the FIA know what sort of numbers and wake profiles teams may be getting - but beyond the definitive rules for 2021 the CFD limits are back in effect. I could be wrong though (and I usually am).
Interesting, what are the reasons for this? Also how different to openFoam is starCCm and how difficult is it to learn?jjn9128 wrote: ↑11 Dec 2018, 21:09Nope. Most (maybe all...) teams use Star.wpsiatwin wrote: ↑11 Dec 2018, 21:07Would most teams be using openFoam with custom solvers?jjn9128 wrote: ↑10 Dec 2018, 14:56
There's not much detail in that article as to what this may be... I read it as a situation like the development for the 2019 rules where teams were allowed to run CFD outside their normal car development to feedback data to FOM/FIA on the progress of the rules. So FOM/FIA will send teams a draft rule or a particular geometry which they're free to simulate so that the FIA know what sort of numbers and wake profiles teams may be getting - but beyond the definitive rules for 2021 the CFD limits are back in effect. I could be wrong though (and I usually am).
Not sure. A lot of teams use Siemens NX so there's an easy work-flow from there. That said McLaren and Renault use Catia. I'm not sure if teams use the built in mesher - but OpenFoam only has a very simple block mesher so do get a nice mesh requires external software, again that might not be any different to the internal practice teams already have. It could be that 15-20 years ago Star really pushed their product for the marketing angle - "F1 teams use it".
I have seen Mercedes ask for experience with Catia on job advertisements so I’m guessing they also use it. With openFoam what about snappyhexmesh?jjn9128 wrote: ↑11 Dec 2018, 21:39Not sure. A lot of teams use Siemens NX so there's an easy work-flow from there. That said McLaren and Renault use Catia. I'm not sure if teams use the built in mesher - but OpenFoam only has a very simple block mesher so do get a nice mesh requires external software, again that might not be any different to the internal practice teams already have. It could be that 15-20 years ago Star really pushed their product for the marketing angle - "F1 teams use it".
I wouldn't say OpenFoam is easy to learn... it has no GUI so from that point of view you have to create text files to do all the work. But if you have an understanding of CFD then you can fairly quickly get the idea of what it's all doing.
SnappyHexMesh is the really basic block mesher I was talking about. I would say ANSA is the industry standard for surface cleaning and meshing, certainly in the automotive industry, but I seem to recall star has some geometry cleaning tools in the pre-processing suite.
In an ideal world, teams would use GPU solving techniques to speed up CFD massively, and then just create a design search and optimization matrix of all sorts of parameters and then hit go, and wait for it to spit out the best design.FW17 wrote: ↑01 Apr 2019, 07:38With a lot of CFD happening along with wind tunnel being used to verify, when will teams start developing AI to do the CFD process? or is AI already in use?
https://www.cfd-online.com/Forums/main/ ... e-cfd.html