So full throttle battery charging is more or less confirmed with this, is it not? We can finally disregard that red bull PU engineer saying it's not allowed?wuzak wrote: ↑04 Jul 2023, 07:08Verstappen on the 2026 rules
“If you go flat-out on the straight at Monza, and I don't know what it is, like four or five hundred [metres] before the end of the straight, you have to downshift flat-out because that's faster.
Christian Horner
"Plus, with the characteristics of these engines, that the combustion engine just doesn't become a generator to recharge a battery."
I read VES as just commenting on aero drag build up requiring a downshift to keep the engine from bogging down.
They'll be burning ~1/3 less fuel and presumably needing less air from the compressor unless they're going for even more extreme dilution. So, less heat, less peak combustion pressure, less power, so the internals could become lighter (although probably won't considering weight regs).hardingfv32 wrote: ↑04 Jul 2023, 19:06Is there any fundamental reason that the IC unit (engine) will be that much different than the current engines under the new rules. I do not think the basic engineering needs to be any different. This assumes that new design efficiencies have not been discovered.
Brian
That was aimed at the statement by Horner:
That's what I'm trying to clarify. Seems like he's just talking about aero, but if what Horner says is true then he could be saying end of straight aero+harvest(i.e. WOT harvest) requires a downshift.wuzak wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 02:24That was aimed at the statement by Horner:vorticism wrote wrote: I read VES as just commenting on aero drag build up requiring a downshift to keep the engine from bogging down.
"Plus, with the characteristics of these engines, that the combustion engine just doesn't become a generator to recharge a battery."
He is talking about running out of battery, which means going from a maximum of 750kW at the start of the straight, to probably 550kW for most of the straight to 400kW when the battery runs out, and down to 300kW if they are recharging at WOT.vorticism wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 03:19That's what I'm trying to clarify. Seems like he's just talking about aero, but if what Horner says is true then he could be saying end of straight aero+harvest(i.e. WOT harvest) requires a downshift.wuzak wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 02:24That was aimed at the statement by Horner:vorticism wrote wrote: I read VES as just commenting on aero drag build up requiring a downshift to keep the engine from bogging down.
"Plus, with the characteristics of these engines, that the combustion engine just doesn't become a generator to recharge a battery."
For comparison, if the MGUH can recover 60kW on average at full throttle, and Monza has 75% full throttle then the MGUH can recover:wuzak wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 05:33The example Max gives is Monza's main straight.
The issue is that there is only 9.5s of braking at Monza according to Brembo.
https://www.brembo.com/en/company/news/ ... mbo-brakes
Assuming 350kW can be recovered for all the braking time, that is 3.325MJ, well short of the allowed 9MJ.
If the remainder is recovered at WOT at a rate of 100kW, that would require 56.75 seconds! Leaving approximately 13.75s to deploy (assuming 80s lap).
It may be that a track like Monza will not use the full 9MJ recovery allowed.
You would think that the simulations would not be very good considering the FIA have not yet published the chassis and aero rules.NL_Fer wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 07:39I think Redbull very much know what they are doing. Probably to push the FIA in finalizing any active aero rules early, so that Redbull can start integrating both aero and powerunit strategies.
Probably they are pushing for a DRS like system to compensate the loss of torque after the battery runs out on the straight. I feel sorry for any team which is less integrated with the engine department.
Thanks for that, I would never have worked that out by myself!saviour stivala wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 06:33The 2026 'K' will produce three times the recovery power then the present 'K' does at present, and that includes on all tracks.
Yeah. I don't think some realize that the brake harvesting is by far the less efficient regeneration tool on these current cars. The MGU-H is the key to why they have good deployment, they don't even reach their 2MJ limit on brake harvesting on nearly all tracks. Getting rid of exhaust gas regen for 2026 is going to make this so much worse.wuzak wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 07:42For comparison, if the MGUH can recover 60kW on average at full throttle, and Monza has 75% full throttle then the MGUH can recover:wuzak wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 05:33The example Max gives is Monza's main straight.
The issue is that there is only 9.5s of braking at Monza according to Brembo.
https://www.brembo.com/en/company/news/ ... mbo-brakes
Assuming 350kW can be recovered for all the braking time, that is 3.325MJ, well short of the allowed 9MJ.
If the remainder is recovered at WOT at a rate of 100kW, that would require 56.75 seconds! Leaving approximately 13.75s to deploy (assuming 80s lap).
It may be that a track like Monza will not use the full 9MJ recovery allowed.
75% * 80s * 60kW = 3,600kJ = 3.6MJ.
Plus we have braking recovery from MGUK.
9.5s * 120kW = 1,140KJ - 1.14MJ.
So current PU could recover as much as 4.7MJ.