Originally Posted by
nulrich
SolidWorks Flow Simulation is not capable of useful formula car aerodynamics, for several reasons: (1) it doesn't handle viscous effects or real boundary layers; (2) the brick meshes aren't accurate enough at any reasonable mesh size, nor is the mesh control fine enough to produce small elements where you need them and larger elements where appropriate; (3) it can't run the 10M to 25M element meshes you need to accurately analyze a half model of a simple formula car.
There are some other minor issues. I wouldn't waste your time, you'll just get bogus results, models that never converge, and system crashes.
Also, unless you're very experienced at CFD on formula or sports racing cars, you're unlikely to model the problem correctly. There are lots of little techniques and tricks of the trade that it takes years to learn. I have a PhD in mechanical engineering, a strong academic background in fluid dynamics, and a fair bit of practical aerodynamics experience, and I wouldn't attempt CFD on a formula car myself.
I would try to find someone who is a CFD expert, preferably with some experience with automotive CFD, and who has access to proper CFD software and convince them to do your aero design.
On the main roll hoop, if I'm seeing it correctly, you aren't in compliance with the GCR. There is a minimum width of the legs where they attach to the floor.
Nathan