From what I've read, it isn't that easy .....collindsilva wrote: ↑21 May 2024, 06:05Seems like someone in the factory messed up the variables..diffuser wrote: ↑21 May 2024, 04:08I don't think the wind tunnel is ever wrong? It's the interpretation of the wind tunnel data by a human that is fed into the CFD that can be wrong.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 23:14
You correlate your CFD with wind tunnel data, until you can get on track data.
If your wind tunnel is wrong, your code will be wrong as well.
The combination of wind tunnels and CFD is often used to validate the accuracy of CFD simulations. Wind tunnel testing provides a physical representation of the airflow around an object, while CFD simulations provide a numerical representation. Like any test, a wind tunnel test can be flawed by not controlling all the variables or other reasons. CFD, on the other hand, is a numerical method that uses algorithms and equations to simulate the behavior of fluids. Someone has to build these CFD models, the floor aero is relatively new to F1, so that increases the chances of the models/algorithms/equations of being flawed as well. Engineers can then compare the results of the two methods, validate the accuracy of their CFD simulations and ensure that their designs are aerodynamically optimal.