Hoffman900 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2024, 13:50
I’m not sure. These PU’s have no real world value; they’ll never meet emissions, they’re way too unreliable for day to day driving, they’re way too expensive for a production car / manufacturer hoping to make a profit, etc.
No prototype racing engine has any "real world value".
They are made to win races.
Not many, if any, racing engines would pass emissions in their full racing form. They have to be modified and retuned to suit road car applications.
You have stated a need for entertainemnet. I guess you would prefer the V10s, which also lacked "real world value", were too expensive to make for production cars and would not pass emissions.
Hoffman900 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2024, 13:50
They have to brag about something to make their shareholders happy. F1 isn’t charity. It’s a for profit showcase for the manufacturers, the rest of it is to sell sponsor space (who in turn want to sell you stuff). The hope is it’s engaging enough “omg 50% TE that’s so cool” that people still pay attention.
If they do a "hero run" and claim 50% TE, but get a couple of percentage less TE in racing, and another manufacturer actually gets 50% TE the former will be beaten. Badly.
It is quite possible, even probable, that one or more of the manufacturers have exceeded that TE, but can't run it in that form because it is unreliable.
Hoffman900 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2024, 13:50
TE isn’t a steady state / constant figure. The fuel flow, the boost level, the throttle percent, and the hybrid contribution is all variable on a F1 car.
Yes, and the BMW DTM engine you used as an example would have as much, maybe even more, variability in its TE.
The quoted TE numbers are peak values, no one is denying that.