Bridging the Gap Between Simulation and Experience
When engineers only had experience, we brought them simulation...
Now that students only have simulation, we bring them the experience.
In the past, engineers relied heavily on hands-on experience. That’s when we introduced simulation to enhance their capabilities.
Today, students have access to powerful simulation tools—but little to no real-world experience. Now, we’re bringing that experience back.
It’s become common for mechanical engineering undergraduates to complete CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) assignments without ever having seen, let alone conducted, a real wind tunnel test.
Why? Because research-grade wind tunnels are large, costly to operate, and typically off-limits to undergraduates. And even on the rare occasions when students do gain access, the time is too short to gain meaningful insight.
The result: students are left trusting whatever appears on their screens—without the physical intuition to question it. And without any reference from real-world testing, simulated data can be misleading, or worse, meaningless.
Why Physical Experience Still MattersSince 1995, SIMTEQ Engineering has been empowering engineers across Sub-Saharan Africa with advanced simulation tools. But as computational power surged, physical understanding has quietly diminished.
Today’s students grow up with screens, not spanners. They’ve played games in pixels, not in treehouses or garages. Their exposure to physical systems—and their natural engineering intuition—has dwindled.
Making Aerodynamic Testing Hands-On AgainWe believe this gap can be closed—starting with aerodynamics. Our affordable desktop wind tunnels are designed to give students a tactile, experimental platform. They're compact, fun to use, and enable meaningful physical tests.
Thanks to accessible 3D printing, students can now design any model they can imagine, test it physically on a desktop wind tunnel, and directly compare those results with their CFD simulations.
In short: We’re not choosing between simulation and experience. We’re giving students both.