Might have been thinking backwards. (Not sure now)
Anyway with onlny 150kW that's a massive reduction in power. Around a third.
Might have been thinking backwards. (Not sure now)
If the ICE can deliver 450kW as Mark Hughes suggests, that would give 600kW, or 800hp.mzso wrote: ↑14 Jul 2023, 11:08Might have been thinking backwards. (Not sure now)
Anyway with onlny 150kW that's a massive reduction in power. Around a third.
don't the fuel heat rate reduction and the MGU-H elimination amount to far more than a 20% reduction in ICE power ?wuzak wrote: ↑14 Jul 2023, 15:28If the ICE can deliver 450kW as Mark Hughes suggests, that would give 600kW, or 800hp.
That's a ~20% reduction in power from current PUs, but should be more than enough given the drag reduction sought for the 2026 cars.
It would also negate the possibility of a 1,000hp car coming up on a 600hp car.
My scenario is 20% reduction in combined maximum power, not ICE power.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑14 Jul 2023, 16:44don't the fuel heat rate reduction and the MGU-H elimination amount to far more than a 20% reduction in ICE power ?wuzak wrote: ↑14 Jul 2023, 15:28If the ICE can deliver 450kW as Mark Hughes suggests, that would give 600kW, or 800hp.
That's a ~20% reduction in power from current PUs, but should be more than enough given the drag reduction sought for the 2026 cars.
It would also negate the possibility of a 1,000hp car coming up on a 600hp car.
They accomplish one thing and one thing only, the manufacturers get to boast about a 50/50 power split and increased electrification. For "road relevance". That's why they are so keen on this and so critical of anyone who questions the entertainment value in these regs. The irony is of course that they are just what you say, less efficient and more cumbersome. Instead of having over 50% thermal efficiency and regenerating exhaust heat (you know actual RE-generation), we are now going to be below 50% TE and using the ICE as an electrical generator to charge the battery. That's supposed to be progress? It's like a skit of the modern board room executive catering to ESG directives. That is pretending to do something whilst in fact doing nothing, or making it worse in this case.mzso wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 12:51Do the motor regs have any meaning anymore? It's some hodge-podge, frankenstein nonsense.
They wanted front wheel recovery and go with less fuel, to keep the weight from increasing. The teams vetoed it. And then they were low in power so the fuel went back 100kg. It would be hilarious if it wasn't pathetic.
So what do the regulations accomplish? Getting inferior to what we have now? (Less efficient and more cumbersome) Change for change's sake?
I'm not one of noise-fetishists, but I think it will also succeed in getting them to cry yet again. With the engine sound being completely detached from delivered power, and the engine going at full power all through (some) turns.
I doubt the cost will plummet either. Instead of the H that's already figured out, now they have to perpetually optimize the ICE and the K to work together well. For the K to be able to generate from ICE power efficiently on loads and RPM when the ICE is not typically efficient.
I ask again, if the power of deployment is the same as the power of recovery, does having front wheel recovery make any difference?
But if the maximum recovery is 350kW, and the deployment is 350kW, whether rear wheel or 4 wheel system, and the braking time is the same, the amount of deployment is the same.chaoticflounder wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 18:17Yes,
This is due to weight transfer on braking.
Front brakes are typically larger than rears for this reason. Technically it limits the harvesting rate (i.e. power) that the rear can recover due to friction limitations that translates to torque upper limits on the electric motors.
isn't the big point of 2 axle recovery to get a max recovery power much more than 350 kW ?
That's what I am trying to get at.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 21:54isn't the big point of 2 axle recovery to get a max recovery power much more than 350 kW ?
even if we don't/can't motor at more than 350 kW
The peak recovery limit is just a label. The actual average recovery power around a lap measured under any braking event is probably less than 350kw during the braking events because of only being able to recover on the rear axle and the limitation of partial braking (analogous to partial throttle).Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑01 Aug 2023, 21:54isn't the big point of 2 axle recovery to get a max recovery power much more than 350 kW ?
even if we don't/can't motor at more than 350 kW
the huge wheelbase helps recovery under these single MG rules - as weight transfer from the rear axle is less
Of course. They can't recover enough with just the rear, so they need to run the ICE against the MGU in recovery mode.
Only if the front MGU doesn't deploy also.mzso wrote: ↑03 Aug 2023, 19:50Of course. They can't recover enough with just the rear, so they need to run the ICE against the MGU in recovery mode.
So more fuel burn. Withe the front wheel recovery they wouldn't need to mess with that.
Whether you deploy 350 kW on four or two wheels is not relevant.wuzak wrote: ↑04 Aug 2023, 02:57Only if the front MGU doesn't deploy also.