Dr. Kentaro Zens, the development engineer responsible for the aerodynamics and aeroacoustics of the Audi RS e-tron GT, says: “On the road, the vehicle moves through the air. Here in the wind tunnel, it’s the exact opposite: The vehicle is stationary and we channel the air around it as evenly as possible. We go to great lengths. Only when the airflow interacts accurately with the vehicle are we able to obtain accurate measurement results that we can rely on.”
Zens sits at his workstation next to the control panels with which the operators regulate the wind tunnel. He can read all the relevant data on screens: What is the drag coefficient, how high is the front-axle lift, how high is the rear-axle lift, at what wind speed and what belt speed?
Standing next to him is Thomas Redenbach, Head of Aerodynamics & Aeroacoustics Development – Vehicle Projects: “When the Wind-Tunnel Center went into operation, it was the first automotive wind tunnel worldwide to combine ground simulation of real-world road conditions for aerodynamics with such extremely quiet aeroacoustic functionality.”
Today, the wind tunnel runs up to six days a week from 7:00 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. in two shifts. And when the Worldwide Harmonized Light-Duty Vehicles Test Procedure (WLTP) certification was introduced by legislators, its capacity was utilized to the full. Moni Islam says: “The complexity of this wind tunnel called for the full commitment and technical expertise of our sister department, which has been operating it for us every day for many years. At the time, our colleagues from wind-tunnel operations provided us developers with 23 hours of testing time per day, as we are required to submit certified wind-tunnel data to legislators as proof of the WLTP values.”