gruntguru wrote: ↑30 Aug 2024, 09:27
Cold Fussion wrote: ↑27 Aug 2024, 16:22
I'll preface this with saying I haven't studied the regulations, but doesn't doing this almost necessitate an active feedback loop, which is surely akin to traction control?
As long as the effort applied at the tyres has always the same relationship to throttle (and/or brake) pedal position - it is not traction control.
Meaning to say - if the "active feedback loop" has tractive effort (or some proxy) as its sole input (not wheel speed etc) it has the same effect as an old fashioned mechanical throttle.
the MGU-K 'control electronics' receive a timing of every revolution (of the MGU-K) - ie hundreds of times per second
so the CE acts like a synthetic 'active camshaft' (pulsing MG excitations in synchrony with instantaneous rotor position)
it's intelligent (in effect the 'magic' velocity-control/ torque-control combo that people seem to envisage) ....
and so knows all about changes in rotational velocity (of the crankshaft that drives the rear wheels)
but continuity of this synchrony isn't guaranteed - or even compelled
ie momentary pole slip (or pole skip) can amount to TC (or ABS)
however the 2026 PU will have response slower than that current (because the MGU-K inertia is higher relatively)
so the 2026 car will be less inclined to wheel spin and slip
as with the 2014 rules it's almost as if the rule-makers know what they are doing