Your credentials notwithstanding, Mario Thiessen published a paper years ago which gave some details of the p85 prototype engine which was developed for 2005 and unused, claiming they had developed a combined port and direct injection system for it.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 13:04There is no BMW direct injection V10 as far as I know. And im a BMW fan.
I don't think it's been suggested to maintain them.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:26You’ll never see the return of naturally aspirated engines under the fuel flow rules.
Those are values in a vacuum; they playing second fiddle to F1's mandated aesthetics. That' the point of my line of arguing as it relates to the aesthetics of the engine. What's the drag value of four .2 cu m cylinders at 200 kph? How does the strength:weight ratio of a curved and cantilevered endplate compare to a planar endplate? Also the weight of the hybrid turbo system did little if anything to offset its reduction in fuel weight. You need to include power:weight among your metrics which determine pipe dreaminess.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:26If you want a good side-by-side of how the two types (naturally aspirated and a fuel flow restricted downsized turbo engine) are efficiency wise, check out Race Engine Technology Issue 136 about Audi’s DTM engines. The peak brake thermal efficiency of the NA V8 was about 36.5% where the turbo DI engine is 42%. It’s no contest. I love naturally aspirated engines and the sound, but this is a pipe dream. Sorry, guys.
PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 13:02If the new electrification rules for 2026 are said to reduce fuel demand by 20% to 30%...ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑15 Aug 2022, 16:14Direct injection doesn't work well past 12k rpm. KERs must be powered, mguh is the perfect combo to KERS, but it turns the wasted engine noise into electrical power, you noise worshippers don't like that. The low friction is because you have 6 pistons instead of 10, and those 6 pistons are moving around 11k rpm rather than 18k rpm.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Aug 2022, 03:00
Remember. They "only" needed 160kg for the whole race because they were so much lighter.
I think if you added TJI direct injection and today's low friction designs plus KERS they might even need less than 100kg of fuel!
There is never a way that v10 will use less fuel than current PU, unless it is making drastically less power. Again, it must be repeated, in 1988 the 1.5L turbo cars were both fuel(195L) and boost(2.5 bars) limited against 3.5L unlimited engines and still the turbo cars won every single race. Asking for v10s back is like asking for carburation back, it is absurd and backwards, just for the sake of noise.
Combine that with the technolgoy... I definitely could see the V10 engines coming down to the 100kg per hour.
I know you are speaking for a practical standpoint but F1 has a way of rewriting the book on things!
As a side note the engines in the Gordon Murrary T50 and the Aston Valkyrie are interesting ones to watch for how efficient or not they are when you compare them to curretn Ferrari and Lamborghini NA V12 engines.
From my memory, anything other than port injection was specifically banned by the regulations back then.vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 17:16Your credentials notwithstanding, Mario Thiessen published a paper years ago which gave some details of the p85 prototype engine which was developed for 2005 and unused, claiming they had developed a combined port and direct injection system for it.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 13:04There is no BMW direct injection V10 as far as I know. And im a BMW fan.
On the start grid, the 2014 W05 weighed less than the 2013 W04vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 17:46I don't think it's been suggested to maintain them.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:26You’ll never see the return of naturally aspirated engines under the fuel flow rules.
Those are values in a vacuum; they playing second fiddle to F1's mandated aesthetics. That' the point of my line of arguing as it relates to the aesthetics of the engine. What's the drag value of four .2 cu m cylinders at 200 kph? How does the strength:weight ratio of a curved and cantilevered endplate compare to a planar endplate? Also the weight of the hybrid turbo system did little if anything to offset its reduction in fuel weight. You need to include power:weight among your metrics which determine pipe dreaminess.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:26If you want a good side-by-side of how the two types (naturally aspirated and a fuel flow restricted downsized turbo engine) are efficiency wise, check out Race Engine Technology Issue 136 about Audi’s DTM engines. The peak brake thermal efficiency of the NA V8 was about 36.5% where the turbo DI engine is 42%. It’s no contest. I love naturally aspirated engines and the sound, but this is a pipe dream. Sorry, guys.
Right but at the end of the race the W04 was 50 kilos lighter. Wikipedia lists 691 kg vs 642 kg respectively, presumably dry weight.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 20:25On the start grid, the 2014 W05 weighed less than the 2013 W04vorticism wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 17:46I don't think it's been suggested to maintain them.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:26You’ll never see the return of naturally aspirated engines under the fuel flow rules.
Those are values in a vacuum; they playing second fiddle to F1's mandated aesthetics. That' the point of my line of arguing as it relates to the aesthetics of the engine. What's the drag value of four .2 cu m cylinders at 200 kph? How does the strength:weight ratio of a curved and cantilevered endplate compare to a planar endplate? Also the weight of the hybrid turbo system did little if anything to offset its reduction in fuel weight. You need to include power:weight among your metrics which determine pipe dreaminess.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 15:26If you want a good side-by-side of how the two types (naturally aspirated and a fuel flow restricted downsized turbo engine) are efficiency wise, check out Race Engine Technology Issue 136 about Audi’s DTM engines. The peak brake thermal efficiency of the NA V8 was about 36.5% where the turbo DI engine is 42%. It’s no contest. I love naturally aspirated engines and the sound, but this is a pipe dream. Sorry, guys.
It wasn't. In 2005 engine longevity rules were added and peak fuel pressure was specified, so they ditched the P85 concept and developed the P84/5 instead.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 20:22From my memory, anything other than port injection was specifically banned by the regulations back then.vorticism wrote: Mario Thiessen published a paper years ago which gave some details of the p85 prototype engine which was developed for 2005 and unused, claiming they had developed a combined port and direct injection system for it.
It's this and a MUCH better understanding of tumble / mixture motion in the cylinder.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 10:26in the archetypal NA 'high-revving V10' .....
piston friction is higher with the very high inertia loads at these high rpm
heat necessarily taken by coolant is higher due to the greater surface area of the larger-bore combustion chambers etc
traditionally a forced induction engine needed to have a lower compression ratio than NA would ...
but now F1 controls combustion rate in real time by injection variation in the microsecond region
so CR has become (equally) high for either type of engine
The highest load on the rings are a function of the average pressure NEAR tdc. Speed near TDC is a good thing because hydrodynamic lubrication mainatains longer before the piston stops and reverses. Its doesn't care for the compression ratio. It only sees that pressure it's trying to hold near TDC when the lubrication boundary is mixed (part metal to metal , part oil boundary).Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 10:26in the archetypal NA 'high-revving V10' .....
piston friction is higher with the very high inertia loads at these high rpm
heat necessarily taken by coolant is higher due to the greater surface area of the larger-bore combustion chambers etc
traditionally a forced induction engine needed to have a lower compression ratio than NA would ...
but now F1 controls combustion rate in real time by injection variation in the microsecond region
so CR has become (equally) high for either type of engine
It's reached 52% now, compared to an average petrol engine which is around 20% or so. Dropping the MGU-H and unrestricting the MGU-K should see more gains made for the 2026 PU's. It remains to be seen if synthetic fuels will be viable outside of motorsport. Your not putting any more additional carbon into the atmosphere depending on the method used to produce synthetic fuels but you still have to contend with air pollution.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Aug 2022, 14:38The PUs are 50% efficient overall. The ICE part alone isn't. Strip off the energy recover systems and you'd lose a huge chunk of that headline efficiency straight away.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Aug 2022, 13:40What?!!Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Aug 2022, 10:07
But much of the efficiency gain is not in the combustion chamber, it's in recovering as much of the energy that comes out of the exhaust ports as possible. A V10 isn't going to be anywhere near the overall efficiency of a current, complicated, hybrid system.
the thermal efficiency of the PU cannot be increased by enlarging the MGU-K