karana wrote: ↑05 Jul 2023, 22:07
Here are some nice quotes from the Reddit user GaryGiesel, a verified F1 vehicle dynamicist, about what might happen in 2026. Found in the comments in here:
https://www.reddit.com/r/formula1/comme ... _terrible/
This one with respect to the claim on a YouTube video that turbo lag returns:
GaryGiesel wrote:I know better than the F1 YouTube channel, given I have actual experience of engineering F1 hybrid power units
A lack of authority from the MGUK is very unlikely to be a problem; it’s more laptime efficient to keep the K not delivering torque until the point where the ICE is delivering full power (in fact, we’re likely to end up running the MGUK in generator mode in part-throttle conditions - this is something we do with the current engines, effectively converting fuel directly into electrical energy).
I can promise you that we as engineers will not accept poor drivability from turbo lag. Where there’s performance to be found we will find it
Another one:
GaryGiesel wrote:We already use the K to fill in torque holes with the current PUs. Reducing turbo lag isn’t the main purpose of the H; it’s there to recover energy on full throttle.
Yes there will be much more clipping with the new regs. It’ll be similar to the last generation of LMP1 cars; massive power out of the corners, but then relatively low top speeds because you don’t have the energy available to sustain. I don’t see it being the death of good racing that so many people here seem to be expecting though, because any sort of overtake button is going to be vastly more powerful. I think we’ll see cars doing big deployments to pass , and then really struggling to keep ahead as they desperately try to recover that extra energy spend. Could be very interesting!
I've seen his comments but I'm quite skeptical of some of the things he says.
a, How are you going to recover any significant amount of energy in partial throttle conditions when your ICE is 350kW and max regen is 350kW? If you want full regen you will have no propulsion. If you take less than full regen the end power at the rear wheels will be so low there can't be many partial throttle corners where this is actually useful for any real length of time. You'll also charge a lot less. Seems like a much more useful tool when you have an 800+ HP ICE and a sub 200 HP MGU-K.
b, His reference to LMP1. It's a closed wheel low drag series, F1 is not (even with fancy active aero). The Toyota had dual axle regen, the Porsche had front axle regen and exhaust gas regen. F1 will be stuck with only rear axle regen and a 50/50 power split. Seems to me these regulations were designed in the image of the Toyota GR050, except with more drag, less overall power and no front axle regen, which kind of defeats the entire concept.