86barettaguy
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posted on 16/8/05 at 02:55 PM |
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Aerodynamics and computers
I've been trying for a couple of weeks to find some software to simulate aerodynamics of cars (or whatever). What options do I have? I know of
Fluent and FloWizard which supposedly work very well with CATIA V5 (which I'm using), but I need something that's a lot cheaper
(preferably free). what would you recommend?
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alister667
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posted on 16/8/05 at 03:16 PM |
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There's a free piece of software from Nasa for Aerofoils/wings available http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/foil2.html
not a full aero sim package, probably not what you're after but interesting to play with.
Steve Graber orginally mentioned it http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=8924
All the best
Ali
http://members.lycos.co.uk/alister667/
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pbura
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posted on 16/8/05 at 03:39 PM |
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Not a clue, but have you talked with Tom Loughlin?
http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=28734
Pete
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britishtrident
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posted on 16/8/05 at 05:35 PM |
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I worked with Fluent about 14 years back for modeling annular diffusers --- using any CFD program properly and getting valid results is a degree of
magnatude harder than using finite elements for structures -- you have to understand whats going on in the flow situation before you can even think
about building a valid model. The boundary conditions for the inlet computational cells are absolutely critical, in reality this means you need a
pile of real tunnel results for a very similar flow situation before you can start -- this of course is why formula one aerodynamics evolve rather
change in radical steps.
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86barettaguy
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posted on 28/8/05 at 05:51 PM |
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So, fluent is a bit complex then?
I was recently asked to find out what CFD software is available and see if there's anything that could be interesting for the company I work for
(a well-known manufacturer of upright freezers and refrigerators).
I was thinking maybe Fluent or FloWizard V2. How do they compare? I think that the ability of using CATIA V5 models directly is a major advantage for
FloWizard, as long as it can manage to simulate everything we need...
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86barettaguy
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posted on 29/8/05 at 05:18 PM |
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so I spoke to the people at Fluent today, to find out more about FloWizard. It seems to be what we are looking for, but the price was not. 100 000
SEK/year (that's not all that far from £70000/year) for software and a license that would enable us to perform all of the calculations
in-house...
I don't know about you, but I was shocked to hear it would cost that much. I'll ask them about the cost for the software alone, without
the updates and support tomorrow.
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