 |

Supercomputers Aid BMW Williams F1 Car DesignFormula One (F1) racing team BMW WilliamsF1 has used Linux-based supercomputers to treble its computational capacity for designing its new car, which was launched this week.
The FW27, the team's car for the 2005 Grand Prix championship, owes much to pre-testing modelling and simulations run on a powerful combination of computer systems, speeding development and allowing the team to conform to new regulations governing the sport.
The car's design required simulations of 1.3TB of aerodynamic data - the equivalent of more than 70,000 volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
This analysis capability was vital, says Alex Burns, general manager of Williams Grand Prix Engineering.
'The computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations we ran helped us get the traditional testing in the wind tunnel right, replacing trial and error,' he said.
The team had to increase capacity to analyse twice as many CFD and crash-test models than last year. The results affected the FW27's front and rear wings, as well as the brake and radiator ducts, without relying as heavily on wind tunnel testing.
Technology supplier and sponsor HP provided WilliamsF1 with a clustered Linux supercomputing infrastructure for running simulations. This connected to a utility computing system at HP Labs in Bristol, to provide flexible access to extra cap
more: uk.news.yahoo.com/050202/175/fbmy... (162)
bookmark:

8/2/2005 | Viewed 7,916 time(s)
|
 |