Is there mention of vee angle or hot vee possibility in any of the specs?
A 120° V would at least be a change in sound...
Battery management and lift-and-coast is the way of electric (or in this case, partly electric) motor racing, it's what Formula E is all about if I understand correctly.CaribouBread wrote: ↑17 Aug 2022, 04:57Do we have any ballpark numbers for the current PU's sustained power figures throughout a race distance? There is no way that the claims that 2026 PUs will retain current power levels accurate right? Maybe peak power but how are they expecting it to work out over a race distance? Would be a damn shame if they do all this work to figure out better aero for following just to be foiled by excessive battery management in the race.
I think increasing the battery weight from 20kg to 220kg for a minimum car weight of at least 1000kg would be sensible. Electric cars tend to be heavy, so this would be very road relevant.
How so? Automakers like FIAT, Mercedes, Renault, Honda and Volkswagen (including Audi and Porsche) will be or are halting ICE development soon. Given the ICE bans coming in 2030 to 2035 in Europe, there is no financial sense to invest in ICEs when they can better invest in EV platforms instead (many of these legacy ICE automakers are very far behind in EVs compared to Tesla, NIO etc). All that will happen is apparently tweaks to older ICEs to conform to increasingly strict emissions regulations.
I doubt they'll have a 200kg battery pack, which would probably be around 80KWh. It's just too heavy for an F1 car, it's even beyond LMP levels of weight. I think there is zero chance there will be no battery pack energy limit, not with how prescribed the ruleset is everywhere else.JordanMugen wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 02:39I think increasing the battery weight from 20kg to 220kg for a minimum car weight of at least 1000kg would be sensible. Electric cars tend to be heavy, so this would be very road relevant.
1000kg is still lightweight compared to roadgoing sportscars.
Leave the maximum MJ usage free and let them have at it trying to make the most energy dense 220kg battery possible!
Downspeeding has been helpful for increasing efficiency.JordanMugen wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 02:39I think increasing the battery weight from 20kg to 220kg for a minimum car weight of at least 1000kg would be sensible. Electric cars tend to be heavy, so this would be very road relevant.
1000kg is still lightweight compared to roadgoing sportscars.
Leave the maximum MJ usage free and let them have at it trying to make the most energy dense 220kg battery possible!
How so? Automakers like FIAT, Mercedes, Renault, Honda and Volkswagen (including Audi and Porsche) will be or are halting ICE development soon. Given the ICE bans coming in 2030 to 2035 in Europe, there is no financial sense to invest in ICEs when they can better invest in EV platforms instead (many of these legacy ICE automakers are very far behind in EVs compared to Tesla, NIO etc). All that will happen is apparently tweaks to older ICEs to conform to increasingly strict emissions regulations.
So, on this basis, the ICE is (unforunately) "needed" to achieve the 1000hp (otherwise you would need a 2000+kg battery to match 100kg of petrol which is not practical) but the automakers want the competition to be on the electrical size not on the legacy ICE side.
It is already a "favour" to fans to stick with detuned V6 turbo engines and unnecessarily high minimum 10,500rpm for maximum fuel flow instead of market-relevant downsizing to 1.0L V4 turbo engines (and no minimum rpm for max. fuel flow, to allow lower rpm to reduce friction) which would arguably sound even worse. [Sure, the Porsche 919, which is essentially such a lower-revving V4 turbo, has it's fans but overall I don't think it sounds that good.]
we might think that downspeeding allows high CR ......johnny comelately wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 10:42Downspeeding has been helpful for increasing efficiency.
Same as now, V6 1.6Ljohnny comelately wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 11:02Hard to match that with 1600cc, any mention of engine size?
Thank youFW17 wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 11:05Same as now, V6 1.6Ljohnny comelately wrote: ↑18 Aug 2022, 11:02Hard to match that with 1600cc, any mention of engine size?