The Honda combustion chamber video changed that thought for me. Shooting a super-strong vortex loop out of the prechamber causes much higher mixing as well as self-ignition due to the shear against the cupped edge of the piston.johnny comelately wrote: β14 Apr 2022, 23:57Point 1.
The reduction of the unburnt fraction which is largely affected by the quench boundary layer. To my way of thinking this can only be achieved by higher combustion chamber wall temperatures. The only way that is possible is through coatings and materials, and then higher coolant temperatures, which seem to be indicated the high system pressures.
I'm not up to speed with the role of the Miller cycle as used here with its early IVC, and I am sure that it is bound up in the bore stroke ratio influence (and possibly why Pat mentioned they are looking at longer strokes), but if the the Miller is to help with turbulence then it is possible to do this another way.Zynerji wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 01:07The Honda combustion chamber video changed that thought for me. Shooting a super-strong vortex loop out of the prechamber causes much higher mixing as well as self-ignition due to the shear against the cupped edge of the piston.johnny comelately wrote: β14 Apr 2022, 23:57Point 1.
The reduction of the unburnt fraction which is largely affected by the quench boundary layer. To my way of thinking this can only be achieved by higher combustion chamber wall temperatures. The only way that is possible is through coatings and materials, and then higher coolant temperatures, which seem to be indicated the high system pressures.
The dolphins in this vid are doing very similar in my opinion. It looked like that is what the Honda vid showed in cylinder.
Unburnt charge is actually only a small fraction of the technology gain. Simply moving the AFR from about Lambda 0.85 to 1.4 will almost eliminate unburnt fuel. (Lambda 0.85 simply means you only have enough oxygen in the combustion chamber to burn 85% of the fuel so the engine must waste at least 15% of the fuel.)johnny comelately wrote: β14 Apr 2022, 23:57Point 1.
The reduction of the unburnt fraction which is largely affected by the quench boundary layer. To my way of thinking this can only be achieved by higher combustion chamber wall temperatures. The only way that is possible is through coatings and materials, and then higher coolant temperatures, which seem to be indicated by the high system pressures of around 3.5 bar (is that correct)
Yes it does, but in doing so takes the boundary layer very close to the chamber walls, necessitating coatings. These have another advantage of putting more heat into the exhaust stream and piston.gruntguru wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 05:47Unburnt charge is actually only a small fraction of the technology gain. Simply moving the AFR from about Lambda 0.85 to 1.4 will almost eliminate unburnt fuel. (Lambda 0.85 simply means you only have enough oxygen in the combustion chamber to burn 85% of the fuel so the engine must waste at least 15% of the fuel.)johnny comelately wrote: β14 Apr 2022, 23:57Point 1.
The reduction of the unburnt fraction which is largely affected by the quench boundary layer. To my way of thinking this can only be achieved by higher combustion chamber wall temperatures. The only way that is possible is through coatings and materials, and then higher coolant temperatures, which seem to be indicated by the high system pressures of around 3.5 bar (is that correct)
I missed that bit. Do you remember where it is on the video?
No, F1 is reading the audience and looking at the future. The old songbook is fine for the the old congregation - who also comprise a large part of the current audience - but we are getting old and dying off. For today's youth to become F1 fans of the future requires the kind of changes Pat talks about. Formula E and Extreme E are examples of series that will be competing for their support.Then he puts his head down and starts whipping himself on stage. He says F1 needs to be something that "fans are proud of," and that if the sport loses interest by not becoming a moral role model, that the sport will "deserve it." I guess Pat has been guilt shamed by too many evocatively narrated nature documentaries. Why are they looking at themselves this way? The hobby became a sport, the sport became a livelihood, became a corporate enterprise, and became a church, apparently. No one was looking to F1 for pseudoreligious political guidance, and even if they were, they were misguided in thinking that F1 was a major source of environmental contamination. His mindset plays into the worst parts of consumerism and western democracies.
Probably. As well as coatings, you have extreme dilution reducing cycle temperature, high expansion ratio reducing charge temperature during the power stroke and stratified charge all helping reduce heat flow to the coolant. 100 kW cooling system load from 1,300 kW total heat input is remarkable.johnny comelately wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 06:06Yes it does, but in doing so takes the boundary layer very close to the chamber walls, necessitating coatings. These have another advantage of putting more heat into the exhaust stream and piston.gruntguru wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 05:47Unburnt charge is actually only a small fraction of the technology gain. Simply moving the AFR from about Lambda 0.85 to 1.4 will almost eliminate unburnt fuel. (Lambda 0.85 simply means you only have enough oxygen in the combustion chamber to burn 85% of the fuel so the engine must waste at least 15% of the fuel.)johnny comelately wrote: β14 Apr 2022, 23:57Point 1.
The reduction of the unburnt fraction which is largely affected by the quench boundary layer. To my way of thinking this can only be achieved by higher combustion chamber wall temperatures. The only way that is possible is through coatings and materials, and then higher coolant temperatures, which seem to be indicated by the high system pressures of around 3.5 bar (is that correct)
Do you think the coolant temperature has to be raised for this to happen?
11:50, dedicated pump
gruntguru wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 06:06No, F1 is reading the audience and looking at the future. The old songbook is fine for the the old congregation - who also comprise a large part of the current audience - but we are getting old and dying off. For today's youth to become F1 fans of the future requires the kind of changes Pat talks about. Formula E and Extreme E are examples of series that will be competing for their support.
Great video!Zynerji wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 01:07The Honda combustion chamber video changed that thought for me. Shooting a super-strong vortex loop out of the prechamber causes much higher mixing as well as self-ignition due to the shear against the cupped edge of the piston.
The dolphins in this vid are doing very similar in my opinion. It looked like that is what the Honda vid showed in cylinder.
Do you mean lean of peak effect?gruntguru wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 06:11Probably. As well as coatings, you have extreme dilution reducing cycle temperature, high expansion ratio reducing charge temperature during the power stroke and stratified charge all helping reduce heat flow to the coolant. 100 kW cooling system load from 1,300 kW total heat input is remarkable.johnny comelately wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 06:06Yes it does, but in doing so takes the boundary layer very close to the chamber walls, necessitating coatings. These have another advantage of putting more heat into the exhaust stream and piston.gruntguru wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 05:47Unburnt charge is actually only a small fraction of the technology gain. Simply moving the AFR from about Lambda 0.85 to 1.4 will almost eliminate unburnt fuel. (Lambda 0.85 simply means you only have enough oxygen in the combustion chamber to burn 85% of the fuel so the engine must waste at least 15% of the fuel.)
Do you think the coolant temperature has to be raised for this to happen?
Extreme dilution (40% excess air) = much lower cycle temperature than stoichiometric.johnny comelately wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 09:02Do you mean lean of peak effect?gruntguru wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 06:11Probably. As well as coatings, you have extreme dilution reducing cycle temperature, high expansion ratio reducing charge temperature during the power stroke and stratified charge all helping reduce heat flow to the coolant. 100 kW cooling system load from 1,300 kW total heat input is remarkable.johnny comelately wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 06:06
Yes it does, but in doing so takes the boundary layer very close to the chamber walls, necessitating coatings. These have another advantage of putting more heat into the exhaust stream and piston.
Do you think the coolant temperature has to be raised for this to happen?
I wasn't counting on the Miller Cycle either.gruntguru wrote: β15 Apr 2022, 07:58Some of the more interesting takeaways:
- lambda 1.3 - 1.4 Many (including myself) were suggesting 1.6 - 1.8. What we weren't counting on was EIVC Miller and the reduced VE associated with that.
- 20% (160 hp) from the turbine.
- Passive pre-chamber with rich mixture courtesy of DI aiming.
- Pre-chamber integral to spark plug.
- Spark plugs require indexing at installation (using shims) suggesting asymmetric placement of PC jet holes.
- Concerns around scavenging of PC. A mystery to me since even 12:1 effective CR and zero scavenging would produce only 8.5% passive EGR and 6% combustion product residual in the PC. Suggests the orifice diameter is so small that PC pressure significantly lags main chamber during compression and exhaust events.
- MAP as high as 5.5 bar to overcome inadequate intake camshaft lift-time area.
- EIVC Miller cycle. Short duration intake lobe results in acceleration-limited valve lift. I wonder if these intake valve trains are even capable of the 15k rpm limit? They were occasionally hitting 15k in the early days but I wonder if this is still the case? They certainly don't operate much above 11k for power reasons and the control system is certainly capable of preventing unintended overspeed.
- Very high sensitivity to octane number.