Source: http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/111960
A slight exaggeration, perhaps, but its time that somebody in F1 admitted the limitations of simulators.
The reality is that every engineering industry relies heavily on testing. Its not just a "nice to have" its an absolute necessity - hence why some testing is still allowed in F1. In fact, vehicle simulations, cfd and wind tunnels models require full scale test data to get them going in the first place.shelly wrote:Personally I like the fact that the rules limit on track testing and force teams to rely more on design and simulation tools; I do not like the extreme "trial and error" approach.
quite so , and not just vehicles but individual components ; would you like brakes on your car that have only been tested on a test bench in a laboratory ? I am certain you wouldn't !Tim.Wright wrote:I think the distinction has to be made here between driver in the loop "simulators" and vehicle model "simulations". The simulators being the massive structures that the driver sits in (driver in the loop) and gets feedback from a vehicle model in the form of platform movement, steering torque and a visual display. Vehicle model simulations on the other hand are only the mathematical model and can run on a single PC.
Some form of simulation will always be used. Until you actually have a car to test, simulations are required to help orient the development in the correct direction.
I think the objection at the moment is that the driver in the loop simulators are massively expensive (though arguably still cheaper than running a test team) while at the same time the race car sits in the factory doing nothing often only a few km away from the forbidden test tracks.
The reality is that every engineering industry relies heavily on testing. Its not just a "nice to have" its an absolute necessity - hence why some testing is still allowed in F1. In fact, vehicle simulations, cfd and wind tunnels models require full scale test data to get them going in the first place.shelly wrote:Personally I like the fact that the rules limit on track testing and force teams to rely more on design and simulation tools; I do not like the extreme "trial and error" approach.
In the automotive industry everyone still produce physical protoypes, run them on durability tracks, handling tracks and ISO/SAE maneuvers. A car is simply too complicated, given the current level of technology, to rely completely on simulation or constrained testing (i.e. a wind tunnel model).
The truth is you can't compare football training with F1 testing. Their "practice facilities" as you put it are stadiums which generate millions in revenue from games which are played there.ecapox wrote:...Spend some $$ and build a test track or locate your facility next to a track and test the damn car. You might spend less than building a state of the art wind tunnel and running it for 20 hours a day.
autosport wrote:Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo has slammed Formula 1's reliance on simulators as a 'joke'.
I'd say his whole spiel is more fundamental, that the sport should involve real, tangible, accessible testing rather than computer work - regardless of quality of predictive tools.Luca di Montezemolo wrote:"We have been forced to invest a huge amount of money in these terrible machines, artificial, instead of testing here and Mugello. [...] But I also want to give more opportunities to the public because from one race weekend to another it is silent in F1. There is nothing, nothing."
woah woah woh, back up there mate, read the what now?Jersey Tom wrote:Step 1 - We read the article rather than just the headline.
Well said, JT. I agree with Luca dM and you as well. A few points overlooked so far:Jersey Tom wrote:Step 1 - We read the article rather than just the headline.
autosport wrote:Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo has slammed Formula 1's reliance on simulators as a 'joke'.I'd say his whole spiel is more fundamental, that the sport should involve real, tangible, accessible testing rather than computer work - regardless of quality of predictive tools.Luca di Montezemolo wrote:"We have been forced to invest a huge amount of money in these terrible machines, artificial, instead of testing here and Mugello. [...] But I also want to give more opportunities to the public because from one race weekend to another it is silent in F1. There is nothing, nothing."
I think the only people who blow F1 DIL simulators out of proportion are the general fans not knowing any better, because of the visual wow factor. I don't think there's any big secret that any computer simulation is just a tool, good at some things and not good at others.
Now with all that said - I do agree with Luca to some extent that yes, there should be a balance between rig testing vs track testing vs simulation work. But at the same time, even if you opened up more track testing... you're just dumping money in an alternative method, and track testing has its own significant shortcomings. Ferrari having their own circuits certainly is convenient though, track rental itself isn't cheap!
This.FrukostScones wrote:political BS by someone who kicks in his TV when he loses big time.
Why should they spend huge money on a DIL simulator when they can test the car and real data instead of a close approximation?wesley123 wrote:This.FrukostScones wrote:political BS by someone who kicks in his TV when he loses big time.
As far as the discussion is great the only thing in this article is "other teams have a better simulator than ours so it is a useless device to have. We have a personal test track next door which we can use any time and other teams can't so we wish to bring back testing so we can get an unfair advantage, which i just called a joke, to our hand.". Really, that's all the guy ever says.
As much as i love to read such interviews from time to time, all Luca di Montezemolo ever says is a lot of whining about how something is unfair because his team lost the championship.
I can't wait for the day that he quits.
-End of Rant-
"Real" data from track testing has its own shortcomings.Pierce89 wrote:Why should they spend huge money on a DIL simulator when they can test the car and real data instead of a close approximation?
Teams spend a huge amount of money on simulators because they can. In reality, the costs of such a simulator would be much lower than to test 24/7Pierce89 wrote: Why should they spend huge money on a DIL simulator when they can test the car and real data instead of a close approximation?