big_dreamin
Junior Member
Realized I should just make a separate post for this... for aviation enthusiasts there is a software called X-Plane which uses Blade Element Analysis theory to calculate the forces that act on airfoils under different simulation conditions and provide a surprisingly accurate simulation of how a plane will actually behave under various control inputs, winds, movements and similar. To the point where some kitplane designers have discovered potential dangers in their design that the test pilot later verified and redesigned to get rid of still in Xplane i'm told.
I would like something where I could model up a hullform in 3d where it would simulate wave mechanics, buoyancy and similar under all sorts of sea states from calm to hurricanes and rogue waves. Just as a way of letting experimenters do that - experiment to see if any clever insights occur or seem to work in a sim that make it worth trying in reality, just with less risk and cost of actual testing of course. (since you don't randomly sail into a gale to prove a point unless youre damn sure of something, in the computer it's no risk)
Basically a way of test piloting the boat before building it with fairly accurate simulation rules. If there's nothing like this, what comes closest? What even tries or attempts at all?
I would like something where I could model up a hullform in 3d where it would simulate wave mechanics, buoyancy and similar under all sorts of sea states from calm to hurricanes and rogue waves. Just as a way of letting experimenters do that - experiment to see if any clever insights occur or seem to work in a sim that make it worth trying in reality, just with less risk and cost of actual testing of course. (since you don't randomly sail into a gale to prove a point unless youre damn sure of something, in the computer it's no risk)
Basically a way of test piloting the boat before building it with fairly accurate simulation rules. If there's nothing like this, what comes closest? What even tries or attempts at all?