Since we were talking about what they could/should do, you still don't know what you're talking about. There's nothing to be seen soon enough...
Since we were talking about what they could/should do, you still don't know what you're talking about. There's nothing to be seen soon enough...
If the downforce of the next generation of cars is similar to now then that would mean 350kw recovery in braking down to about 170kph, reducing thereafter.BassVirolla wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 11:29https://mobile.twitter.com/tgruener/sta ... 7859673110
No MGUH; more powerful MGUK. Only rear axle recovery.
YuckBassVirolla wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 11:29https://mobile.twitter.com/tgruener/sta ... 7859673110
No MGUH; more powerful MGUK. Only rear axle recovery.
So just making the current PU more primitive, inferior. What a pointless change.BassVirolla wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 11:29https://mobile.twitter.com/tgruener/sta ... 7859673110
No MGUH; more powerful MGUK. Only rear axle recovery.
So little braking power below 170? Rather suprising knowing they go above 3000 kW from top speed.
recovery power will be rather constant under braking as downshifting maintains K rpm despite car speed reducing ....
But torque required to "spin back" the engine / MGU-K from the wheels is greater with lower gears, while downforce is reducing. I see this quite like a short bust process, rather than a continuous recovery through downshifting.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 18:21recovery power will be rather constant under braking as downshifting maintains K rpm despite car speed reducing ....
the axle torque corresponding to constant recovery power increasing with each downshift until ....
axle torque demands all the available wheel grip (the grip is reducing with speed because DF reduces with speed) ....
then K recovery torque ie current must be reduced to avoid wheel under-rotation etc ...
and K voltage is now also falling with speed recovery power is now falling strongly ....
so recovery might be discontinued - braking becoming all-mechanical at this point
I'd say a carbon-neutral fuel source is very modern. Then we can get back to the sound while being "green".mzso wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 16:30So just making the current PU more primitive, inferior. What a pointless change.BassVirolla wrote: ↑01 Oct 2021, 11:29https://mobile.twitter.com/tgruener/sta ... 7859673110
No MGUH; more powerful MGUK. Only rear axle recovery.
F1 was already backwards, now it will be more so.
What's really ridiculous is deciding regulations 5 years in advance. They should have made the decision for 2023.
By the time the new PU is deployed it will likely be a dodo technology.
So little braking power below 170? Rather suprising knowing they go above 3000 kW from top speed.
Or the Cugnot engine. Yay museum tech!
You're the same sort that yells "pinnacle of motorsport technology" in other threads, right?
I have previously calculated that with the current 120kW the rear wheels would loc(under rotate) at around 120kph.
Except it's not even remotely green. Not only is the manufacturing more complex, it is quite significantly less efficient. It requires more energy to produce than an electric car itself uses. And then we haven't even mentioned the actual efficiency in use. For synthetic fuels this will be around 50%, just like current engines. EV's however, have an efficiency that is far higher.