Deployment ('K'- to - crankshaft is dependent on throttle, if throttle pedal is not being activated there is no deployment by 'K'. Harvesting ('K' - to - 'ES/'H' is dependent on brake pedal, if brake pedal is not being activated there is no harvesting by 'K'. But as explained before, In both cases as long as the engine is running the 'K' is riding along on the crankshaft.wuzak wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 12:46I believe in his interview he explained he doesn't know all about the ERS side of things.saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 12:11Personally I am certainly convinced that an engine design team leader will know exactly what he is talking about, regardless of what you and others on here believe.
Why do you think that recovery is activated by the brake pedal?saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 12:11Yes. The ‘K’ ‘HARVESTING’ under braking is the same mechanism when lift-and-coasting, essentially engine braking, But apart from the engine braking, which means the engine is as explained elsewhere, is driving the ‘K’, it is during lift and coast driving the ‘K’ free of any ‘IN’ or ‘OUT’ load as both the throttle which activates deploying and the brake pedal, which activates harvesting are not activated – being used.
Certainly deployment is not controlled completely by the throttle pedal - it doesn't always deploy when the throttle is activated.
aleks_ader wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 17:55Well he is developing combustion chamber and test benchers. So for him any ERS knowledge doesn't change anything. I would not exclude loopholes in engine mapping in that area.
In lift-and-coast the engine is making the same amount of power that it is when the brakes are activated.saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 17:38Why do I say that recovery is activated by the brake pedal. Because 'K' converts kinetic energy from the brakes that would otherwise have gone to waste into electrical energy. If electrical energy is harvested by the 'K' when the brakes are not activated, that harvesting is being done by using fuel (engine running 'K'). As I said, am more than convinced that the RBPT engineer known exactly what he was talking about.
the driver lifts off the accelerator but doesn't touch the brake pedal .....saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Nov 2022, 09:46The only possible use of the MGU-K to charge the ES or help the ‘H’ by burning fuel (‘K’ run by engine) will still involve the activation of the brake and throttle pedals at the same time.
Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑21 Nov 2022, 13:19the driver lifts off the accelerator but doesn't touch the brake pedal .....saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Nov 2022, 09:46The only possible use of the MGU-K to charge the ES or help the ‘H’ by burning fuel (‘K’ run by engine) will still involve the activation of the brake and throttle pedals at the same time.
the ICE gets no fuel .....
in such generating the K is reducing the car speed & PU rpm etc - turning unwanted KE into electrical energy
this isn't 'burning fuel' ....
so it isn't 'engine running the K'
sorry if this is repetitious
No problem with being 'repetitious' at least with me.
Fully in agreement that the engine gets no fuel when driver lifts accelerator, but unless he activates brake pedal there will be no ‘K’ harvesting.
so ....saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Nov 2022, 13:38No problem with being 'repetitious' at least with me.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Nov 2022, 09:46The only possible use of the MGU-K to charge the ES or help the ‘H’ by burning fuel (‘K’ run by engine) will still involve the activation of the brake and throttle pedals at the same time.
Fully in agreement that the engine gets no fuel when driver lifts accelerator, but unless he activates brake pedal there will be no ‘K’ harvesting.
Well yeah. I mean he emphasised that he is NO ERS lead. So holistically speaking it does not change his part of turbo V6 development anyway.saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 21:52aleks_ader wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 17:55Well he is developing combustion chamber and test benchers. So for him any ERS knowledge doesn't change anything. I would not exclude loopholes in engine mapping in that area.
So we are here to believe that a man of the caliber of a formula one engine design team leader engineer went into an interview with one of the top technical magazines and he was pushing out opinions which are out of his competence. PLEASE count me out of this on here subject as too much is too much to stomach.
It appears he is using frequency analysis from the exhaust mic to determine when the car is at full throttle and when the wastegates are open.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑22 Nov 2022, 06:05What's the resolution on this data and how is it being measured?