Though the regulations that allow power output to reduce by up to 450kW at 100kW/s would suggest otherwise.
Though the regulations that allow power output to reduce by up to 450kW at 100kW/s would suggest otherwise.
Driving the MGU-K with the engine isn't allowed for all practical purposes because there are regulations surrounding the vehicle response to throttle and braking input to prevent things like traction control and other traction driver aids.saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 13:40‘’ So RBPT engineer was of the opinion that driving the MGU-K with the engine would not be allowed’’. That is the same as at present rules, because driving the MGU-K with the engine to harvest means using fuel to harvest. And. As at present rules, lift and coast will neither harvest. Harvest by the MGU-K only takes place when driver hits the brakes. Lift and coast is at present only good to save fuel and brakes, because brakes are not being activated, they are letting the air absorbs some of the energy that the brakes would have if driver had hit the brakes.
This is not the case.AR3-GP wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 16:18Driving the MGU-K with the engine isn't allowed for all practical purposes because there are regulations surrounding the vehicle response to throttle and braking input to prevent things like traction control and other traction driver aids.saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 13:40‘’ So RBPT engineer was of the opinion that driving the MGU-K with the engine would not be allowed’’. That is the same as at present rules, because driving the MGU-K with the engine to harvest means using fuel to harvest. And. As at present rules, lift and coast will neither harvest. Harvest by the MGU-K only takes place when driver hits the brakes. Lift and coast is at present only good to save fuel and brakes, because brakes are not being activated, they are letting the air absorbs some of the energy that the brakes would have if driver had hit the brakes.
So basically, the only way the MGU-K can cause retardation against the engine is if the driver pushes the brake pedal while accelerating. If the driver is not pushing the brake pedal, then any retardation from the MGU-K beyond the inherent mechanical losses of the rotating elements could be devised as a form of traction control.
I don't think we are discussing the same thing. There's no restriction in the regulation about mixing ICE and MGU-K to meet the torque demand from the throttle pedal as long as the throttle pedal can produce the same torque response, turbo lag aside to avoid suspicion of traction control.henry wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 18:22This is not the case.AR3-GP wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 16:18Driving the MGU-K with the engine isn't allowed for all practical purposes because there are regulations surrounding the vehicle response to throttle and braking input to prevent things like traction control and other traction driver aids.saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 13:40‘’ So RBPT engineer was of the opinion that driving the MGU-K with the engine would not be allowed’’. That is the same as at present rules, because driving the MGU-K with the engine to harvest means using fuel to harvest. And. As at present rules, lift and coast will neither harvest. Harvest by the MGU-K only takes place when driver hits the brakes. Lift and coast is at present only good to save fuel and brakes, because brakes are not being activated, they are letting the air absorbs some of the energy that the brakes would have if driver had hit the brakes.
So basically, the only way the MGU-K can cause retardation against the engine is if the driver pushes the brake pedal while accelerating. If the driver is not pushing the brake pedal, then any retardation from the MGU-K beyond the inherent mechanical losses of the rotating elements could be devised as a form of traction control.
At part throttle the ECU can mix ICU and MGU-K to match the driver torque demand. This is a little more restricted now than it was initially by restrictions on fuel flow versus power.
At max torque demand the ECU decides on the power output by mixing max ICU and K in several discrete steps; in decreasing order of power, Esupercharge, self sustain plus, self sustain, ICU only, ICU minus k. There are a couple of others which Honda used which cycled the K at something like 20 to 40Hz.
Even when braking it is legal, and may have been deployed, to drive with the ICU when the K saturates the available rear axle traction, last year this was at about 120kph. This year I don’t know the speed but might be a little higher if this years cars generate less low speed downforce c
generation without braking seems entirely to be allowed as long as the resulting PU output is within the mapping rules ..AR3-GP wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 16:18Driving the MGU-K with the engine isn't allowed for all practical purposes because there are regulations surrounding the vehicle response to throttle and braking input to prevent things like traction control and other traction driver aids.
So basically, the only way the MGU-K can cause retardation against the engine is if the driver pushes the brake pedal while accelerating. If the driver is not pushing the brake pedal, then any retardation from the MGU-K beyond the inherent mechanical losses of the rotating elements could be devised as a form of traction control.
We are discussing exactly the same thing. There is no requirement to use the brake pedal to have the K harvest. During every upshift the K harvests to help drop the ICU revs. The K is wholly under software control and can drive or harvest at will so long as the rules on driver input to torque output are met, as @Tommy Cookers says the control must not take into account road speed.AR3-GP wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 18:32I don't think we are discussing the same thing. There's no restriction in the regulation about mixing ICE and MGU-K to meet the torque demand from the throttle pedal as long as the throttle pedal can produce the same torque response, turbo lag aside to avoid suspicion of traction control.henry wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 18:22This is not the case.AR3-GP wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 16:18
Driving the MGU-K with the engine isn't allowed for all practical purposes because there are regulations surrounding the vehicle response to throttle and braking input to prevent things like traction control and other traction driver aids.
So basically, the only way the MGU-K can cause retardation against the engine is if the driver pushes the brake pedal while accelerating. If the driver is not pushing the brake pedal, then any retardation from the MGU-K beyond the inherent mechanical losses of the rotating elements could be devised as a form of traction control.
At part throttle the ECU can mix ICU and MGU-K to match the driver torque demand. This is a little more restricted now than it was initially by restrictions on fuel flow versus power.
At max torque demand the ECU decides on the power output by mixing max ICU and K in several discrete steps; in decreasing order of power, Esupercharge, self sustain plus, self sustain, ICU only, ICU minus k. There are a couple of others which Honda used which cycled the K at something like 20 to 40Hz.
Even when braking it is legal, and may have been deployed, to drive with the ICU when the K saturates the available rear axle traction, last year this was at about 120kph. This year I don’t know the speed but might be a little higher if this years cars generate less low speed downforce c
The problem is using the MGU-K as a form of retardation on the drivetrain (i.e trying to harvest with the MGU-K in the absence of a braking input). I don't see how this is not traction control (even if a team were to pretend it's not the main function), which is banned.
yes the FIA can see what at all times the software is telling the MG to do ....
Well we can be sure that if there are any benefits for traction, the engineers have designed the latencies in such a way that it's making it easier to drive, not harderTommy Cookers wrote: ↑09 Nov 2022, 00:54yes the FIA can see what at all times the software is telling the MG to do ....
but conceivably the MG might not at all times actually do what the software is telling it to do ....
eg sudden wheelspin might cause pole slipping, tending to kill wheelspin ....
on braking sudden wheel under-rotation might cause pole jumping, tending to kill wheel under-rotation/locking
the FIA might or might not highlight this as being traction control or ABS-type driver aids ...
and it's possible the system could do or appear to do suspect things even without any ulterior design
why not ? .... isn't fuel-limited hybrid F1 fuel-limited hybrid F1 ?saviour stivala wrote: ↑10 Nov 2022, 08:48Are those claimed things (attempts at harvesting when the brakes are not being used, so MGU-K is powered by engine) is still being used/allowed to be used?.