Abstract

This article highlights the advances in the aerodynamic development and test processes of both road and motorsports cars over the last two decades, including explaining the main driving forces behind this evolution. The relentless and continuous drive to improve efficiency and correlation between computational fluid dynamics, real-time simulation, wind tunnel testing, and the track is explained. Key enabling technologies are described, such as: continuous motion systems; high-speed data acquisition systems; steel moving belt ground planes with under floor load cells; on-demand robotic particle image velocimetry; pneumatic model tyres with integral sidewall and contact patch deflection systems; driver simulators and rapid prototyped rake systems for track cars. Finally, as aerodynamicists attempt to simulate and test within ever more complex and realistic environments potential future directions and emerging trends are outlined, including gusts, aeroelasticity, adaptive cooling, and cornering.

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