mzso wrote: ↑16 Oct 2022, 17:33
wuzak wrote: ↑13 Oct 2022, 03:17
mzso wrote: ↑09 Oct 2022, 08:53
This rule is wacky. So the maximum reduction can only be 450kW. Meaning there can't be any regen if the straight is started with full power with the K active.
Does it mean that the maximum regen when the driver has his foot on the throttle is 100kW?
Start the straight with 400kW ICE and 350kW MGUK, 750kW total, which can be reduced by a maximum of 450kW, which gives a minimum power of 300kW, meaning only 100kW of generation is allowed.
That, of course, changes when the driver brakes, as there is no longer any torque demand.
I don't know what it means. The more I look at it the more nonsensical it seems.
The numbers I can come up with seem to suggest that to recover 9MJ they will have about 52.5s per lap regenerating on an average F1 circuit.
wuzak wrote: ↑13 Oct 2022, 03:23
Let's assume 15s of braking heavy enough to recover @ 350kW.
That gives 5.25MJ, leaving 3.75MJ that is allowed to be recovered.
3.75MJ @ 100kW = 37.5s. That's about 40-50% of most laps in F1 where they would be flat chat down the straights with 300kw/400hp!
52.5s generating and ~25s @ 350kW deployment. So about the full lap time at most circuits (or more than some).
The reason for dropping the MGUH was to simplify the engine. But, to me, the MGUH is very simple in concept. What was complex was the energy management. But with the 2026 PUs the energy management will be just as complex, if not more so due to the additional parameters/restrictions of use.