FS Rules Quiz Quick Start
This page shows how to use Everything Aero to solve typical
FS Rules Quiz problems quickly and reliably.
If the problem can be solved with equations, this tool can usually solve it with minimal setup.
Mental Model (Read This First)
Everything Aero is not a step-by-step calculator.
You do not:
choose formulas manually
decide calculation order
worry about solving intermediate variables
You only:
Write down what the problem gives you
Add any explicit assumptions
Tell the solver what you want to find
The solver figures out the rest.
Every Symbol Must Have an Index
Every variable must have an index.
Correct:
v0 = 30
rho0 = 1.225
Wrong:
v = 30
rho = 1.225
If the problem describes only one condition, always use index 0.
Typical FS-Quiz Workflow
Step 1: Write down given values
Copy everything the problem gives you numerically into Equations.
Example:
v0 = 30
rho0 = 1.225
C_L0 = -3.0
A0 = 1.2
m0 = 280
Step 2: Add stated assumptions
If the problem says things like:
“assume no lateral load transfer”
“neglect drag”
“ignore aerodynamic moments”
Input them in Assumptions.
Example:
W_lat0 = 0
Assumptions are treated as soft constraints and can be relaxed if needed.
Step 3: Ask the question (optional)
Put exactly what the question asks for into Looking For.
Examples:
Re0
F_z_total_cornering_fl
v1
This tells the solver:
what to highlight
what to prioritize if equations conflict
Example 1: Reynolds Number
Problem
A car drives at 30 m/s.
Characteristic length is 0.3 m.
Air density is 1.225 kg/m³.
Dynamic viscosity is 1.8e-5 Pa·s.
Find the Reynolds number.
Equations
v0 = 30
L0 = 0.3
rho0 = 1.225
eta0 = 1.8e-5
Looking for
Re0
Output
\(Re_0 = 612500.0\)
Example 2: Wind Tunnel Scaling
Problem
A 50% scale model must match Reynolds number of the full car.
Air properties are identical.
Full-scale speed is 30 m/s.
Find tunnel speed.
Equations
Re0 = Re1
L0 = 1.0
L1 = 0.5
v0 = 30
rho0 = rho1
eta0 = eta1
Looking for
v1
Output
\(v_1 = 60.0\)
Final Advice
If you’re unsure:
Put everything in Equations
Put stated assumptions in Assumptions
Put the question in Looking for
Let the solver do the rest.