Encyclopaedia Index
6. Concluding remarks
At the end of this review of computer-aided engineering, or rather
of that limited part of it with which he has some acquaintance, the
present author finds himself optimistic about the future.
There have been disappointments, admittedly; for example:
- the turbulence models which came to prominence in the early
seventies have proved to be less and less satisfactory the more
they are used and studied;
- what early CFD-code developers thought were easy to use were
found quite otherwise by those to whom they were provided;
- even now, scarcely any CFD calculations are carried out with grids
which are fine enough for assured accuracy; and
- some CFD-code vendors, by claiming too much, have spread
disillusionment among practical engineers.
Nevertheless, there are reasons or optimism; and specifically:-
- the scarcely-yet-explored multi-fluid turbulence models open vast
new vistas;
- true ease of use now been made possible by exploiting techniques
developed for the general computer-using populace (and especially
children), such as virtual reality;
- the previously-separate worlds of stress analysis and CFD appear
to be amenable to merging into SFT; and
- remote parallel computing, with "on-tap" advice, will greatly
enlarge the number of engineers who can afford to use the
simulation, analysis and design techniques.
Perhaps, when these advances have been made, engineers will soon be
enabled to advance from CAD-1 all the way to CAD-2.
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