What will come after the 2.4 V8?

All that has to do with the power train, gearbox, clutch, fuels and lubricants, etc. Generally the mechanical side of Formula One.
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747heavy
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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~1.6 ltr.
"Make the suspension adjustable and they will adjust it wrong ......
look what they can do to a carburetor in just a few moments of stupidity with a screwdriver."
- Colin Chapman

“Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.” - Leonardo da Vinci

kalinka
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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xxChrisxx wrote:
kalinka wrote:I'm quite OK with all engine proposals on long term, but what hurts me is the rev limit of 10k or whatever RPM. We saw what a rev. limit can do against overtaking in SPA, where Vettel was unbable to overtake just because hitting the rev. limit.
The answer to this is very, very simple. Gear 7th longer.

EDIT: And I already have my response message typed out for what I inevitably think is coming. It goes along the lines of "you can't have your cake and eat it too".

Ok. You didn't get my point. I just don't want to a rev limit being a limit to overtake. If you choose longer 7th gear you loose some of acceleration. If you are slipstreaming, the only limit is the regulation ( if you set up your car to extract max engine power ). Why must the regulations say anything about revs? Why not allow a driver if he wants to take a risk, and go for the overtake, and go over the rev limit if he wants for a few seconds ? If the engine brakes, so what...that was his decision. It was stupid to see in SPA, that when RBR would overtake, they hit the 18k limit. Probably they set up their 7th gear for qualy when there is no slipstream...

EDIT : as I say, I'm far from being a RBR fan.

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strad
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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Can't see a 1600cc V-6...maybe...but I just don't think so.
To achieve anything, you must be prepared to dabble on the boundary of disaster.”
Sir Stirling Moss

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strad
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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Just had to go look. :lol: ..Memory is not as good as this old dude thought. :oops: .It was half of a 389..I'da sworn it was half a 421..
wiki:
Perhaps the most unusual variation of the durable Pontiac V8 was not a V8 at all, but an inline four. Created for the 1961 Pontiac Tempest, it was essentially the right bank of the 389, sharing most of its tooling and many of its parts (more than 120 were identical). The bore and stroke of 4 1⁄16 in (103.2 mm) and 3 3⁄4 in (95.2 mm) were the same, giving a displacement of 194.4 cu in (3.186 L).
To achieve anything, you must be prepared to dabble on the boundary of disaster.”
Sir Stirling Moss

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WhiteBlue
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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xpensive wrote:I think you have developed a knack for reading your own preferences out of almost anything nowadays WB, where is Goss saying that McLaren wants an I4 and what makes you think that Ferrari would be alone favouring a V6?
The article makes it clear that the majority of teams support a 1.6L L4 and Goss (McLaren) is supporting that formula. Unfortunately the full interview isn't printed at Motorsport.com, but the context makes it clear.

If have no clue how Mercedes and Renault see this issue but it could be possible that they agree with McLaren and not Ferrari. Both manufacturers do smaller engines as well. Not all manufacturers are as rigid as Ferrari. VW for instance promote the L4 although they use W16, W12 and V8s in heir luxury cars.
Last edited by WhiteBlue on 09 Sep 2010, 08:24, edited 1 time in total.
Formula One's fundamental ethos is about success coming to those with the most ingenious engineering and best .............................. organization, not to those with the biggest budget. (Dave Richards)

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ringo
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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xpensive wrote:
WhiteBlue wrote:McLaren have distanced themselves from the Ferrari position and have pointed out that they support a 1.6L L4 engine.
Motorsport.com wrote:Tim Goss, chief engineer of McLaren's 2010 car the MP4-25, said the British team is supportive of the new rules.

"I think for Formula One to show it is at the cutting edge of technology in regards to engines and to promote fuel efficiency, it's entirely the right thing to do," he said during a Vodafone teleconference.

Goss also contradicted Marmorini's claim that there isn't enough time before 2013 to design the new engines.

"As long as the decisions are made shortly, and I think everyone is in a frame of mind to bring it to a conclusion fairly promptly, (there is enough time)."
Interesting to see one automotive team to join the the privateers. It looks like Ferrari could be alone on this.
I think you have developed a knack for reading your own preferences out of almost anything nowadays WB, where is Goss saying that McLaren wants an I4 and what makes you think that Ferrari would be alone favouring a V6?
I was gonna ask the same thing! :lol: I think we've got a Sigmund Freud here on F1T. :)
For Sure!!

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ringo
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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WhiteBlue wrote:
xpensive wrote:I think you have developed a knack for reading your own preferences out of almost anything nowadays WB, where is Goss saying that McLaren wants an I4 and what makes you think that Ferrari would be alone favouring a V6?
The article makes that it clear that the majority of teams support a 1.6L L4 and Goss (McLaren) is supporting that formula. Unfortunately the full interview isn't printed at Motorsport.com, but the context makes it clear.

If have no clue how Mercedes and Renault see this issue but it could be possible that they agree with McLaren and not Ferrari. Both manufacturers do smaller engines as well. Not all manufacturers are as rigid as Ferrari. VW for instance promote the L4 although they use W16, W12 and V8s in heir luxury cars.
I feel sorry for ferrari; all manufactures have special interests with the L4, even Mclaren, now that Gordon Murray is making his smart cars. Ferrari have no commercial interests with an L4 whatsoever.
I take it Mercedes and Renault will be neutral to the idea.

Well the L4 is winning the popularity contest 60:40 to the V6. Let's see what new technologies will be incorporated onto the engine, we haven't heard anything on that as yet.
For Sure!!

xxChrisxx
xxChrisxx
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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Ok. You didn't get my point. I just don't want to a rev limit being a limit to overtake. If you choose longer 7th gear you loose some of acceleration.
This was the you can't have everything response. They set up their car to have a set max speed, they couldn't overtake becuase of it. Sucks to be them.
Why must the regulations say anything about revs? Why not allow a driver if he wants to take a risk, and go for the overtake, and go over the rev limit if he wants for a few seconds ?
They had this up until 2007. And if you remeber people were spending absolutely stupid amounts of money getting more and more revs for no percivable gain. There were two ways to stop this.
1: a cap on development spending.
2: regulate by technical rules.

They chose the latter. Also 'push to pass' is back on the cards with the reintroduction of KERS.

If the engine brakes, so what...that was his decision. It was stupid to see in SPA, that when RBR would overtake, they hit the 18k limit.
I personally think there should be no rev limit, and that it should be determined by how well the engine is engineered. Rev limits will quickly become self limiting with a set amount of engines per driver. I don't really care about costs becuase im not paying.

You keep saying that 'when the RBR could overtake'. Well the fact of the matter is, it couldn't. The setup didn't allow it, and thats just tough ---.

xpensive
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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One of the downsides with this here forum is when some members are so obsessed with being right on every issue, that instead of discussing sensibly tries everywhichway to find evidence, no matter how far fetched, for their cause.

Nobody knows for a fact which of the engine manufacturers supports what layout, more than an article saying Ferrari won't have an I4. But we can speculate, which is great fun, as long as nobody claims to have a divine insight on the outcome?

Fuel-flow limitation might be a good xample of how wrong even the most devoted F1T member can be at times.

Btw esteemed moderator, when there is an overlap between this thread and "Technical reg...", can we merge some posts?
"I spent most of my money on wine and women...I wasted the rest"

kalinka
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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xxChrisxx wrote: I personally think there should be no rev limit, and that it should be determined by how well the engine is engineered. Rev limits will quickly become self limiting with a set amount of engines per driver. I don't really care about costs becuase im not paying.
I can agree with you on that. That was my point too. I don't want the limit because of the regulations. If they can't afford a higher limit because of the design, that's OK, but now with the 18k limit, if you have a less powerful engine, and you can get finally a good slipstream somehow, you still can't overtake, even if you are ready to take risk damaging your engine.
xxChrisxx wrote: You keep saying that 'when the RBR could overtake'. Well the fact of the matter is, it couldn't. The setup didn't allow it, and thats just tough ---.
No, it can't, and I'm glad it can't :) But I'm still feeling it's not fair if the rule remains like this for long.

xxChrisxx
xxChrisxx
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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xpensive wrote:Nobody knows for a fact which of the engine manufacturers supports what layout, more than an article saying Ferrari won't have an I4. But we can speculate, which is great fun, as long as nobody claims to have a divine insight on the outcome?
For all their posturing Ferrari still really want to be in F1, if the rules state the engine is to be an inline 4, they will turn up with an inline 4.

To be honest i'd quite like to see different engines again, it's more interesting than everything being mandated as essentially the same. Given time people will converge on an optimal solution, it's not the end product that you learn/develop from it's the path taken to the solution. Again I'm all for this because i'm not paying for develpoment.

And to veer off into rules land, the problem with all this is that F1 is still trying to be all things to all men. Most technical race series, fastest open wheel series, entertaining sport, road car transferrability, business PR platform, cheap (relatively).

The road car transferrability aspect they REALLY have screwed up. The focus is on an easy to plug gimmick such as KERS. Where as the things that would really help development such as new machining techniques, coatings and surface/heat treatments of components, or whole new materials is all banned, purely becuse that's "boring" engineering stuff you can't easily market.

kalinka
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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xxChrisxx wrote: The road car transferrability aspect they REALLY have screwed up. The focus is on an easy to plug gimmick such as KERS. Where as the things that would really help development such as new machining techniques, coatings and surface/heat treatments of components, or whole new materials is all banned, purely becuse that's "boring" engineering stuff you can't easily market.
+1

I really miss the good old days, when before every race the commentators were discussing new exotic techniques that were used in engines,gearboxes..etc. Now that's all banned. With old regulations there was a chance to something eventually ccould be transferred to road cars, like active suspension, traction control, semi-automatic gearboxes...etc. It was just FIA's unability to control these things that led to current rules. No question some of them had to be banned, but again...what tecnology were transferred to road cars after year 2000 ? I can't tell. What can you transfer now ? F-Duct? Flexing wings,floors, blown diffusors ? None of them.

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djos
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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I saw an article recently were Ferrari where (sensibly I thought) suggesting they lop 2 cylinders off the current V8 providing a 1.6ltr V6 and then turbo-charging it (every other item would stay the same as the V8).

The rational was it would save money on gearbox and chassis's not needing to be re-designed to fit an I4 and the engine would be cheaper to develop providing teams had to keep the components in-common with the V8 untouched.
kalinka wrote: +1

I really miss the good old days, when before every race the commentators were discussing new exotic techniques that were used in engines,gearboxes..etc. Now that's all banned. With old regulations there was a chance to something eventually ccould be transferred to road cars, like active suspension, traction control, semi-automatic gearboxes...etc. It was just FIA's unability to control these things that led to current rules. No question some of them had to be banned, but again...what tecnology were transferred to road cars after year 2000 ? I can't tell. What can you transfer now ? F-Duct? Flexing wings,floors, blown diffusors ? None of them.
+1 also
"In downforce we trust"

twoshots
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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I think the new power train regs are as good as done. I believe they are now discussing if the document written up actually specifies what they all thought they had agreed upon.

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WhiteBlue
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Re: What will come after the 2.4 V8?

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djos wrote:I saw an article recently were Ferrari where (sensibly I thought) suggesting they lop 2 cylinders off the current V8 providing a 1.6ltr V6 and then turbo-charging it (every other item would stay the same as the V8).

The rational was it would save money on gearbox and chassis's not needing to be re-designed to fit an I4 and the engine would be cheaper to develop providing teams had to keep the components in-common with the V8 untouched.
It was probably the report at the following URL which btw proposed a 1.8L V6. I have discussed it in detail.

http://motorsport.com/news/article.asp?ID=385828&FS=F1
WhiteBlue wrote:
Luca Marmorini wrote:A 1.8 litre V6 engine design would be much easier to adapt from the current 2.4 litre V8s as there is not enough time to design a completely new engine for 2013 with the necessary reliability to have only four units per driver and year.
I believe that this is not the true reason for the proposed formula. An optimized 1.8L turbocharged V6 would have a completely different engine technology compared to a NA 2.4L V8. The engine rpms would be much lower in a turbo engine with direct injection. As a consequence the bore/stroke ratio would be different, which necessitates different engine and cylinder blocks, the firing order and the crank shaft would be different including the bearing technology. The loads from inertial forces and working forces would be different requiring a totally new design of pistons and connecting rods. The valve trains and ports would be different in a new formula due to the use of variable timing and lift. This would also impact on the cylinder head design. At the bottom line you see that nothing of the old engine would remain. There is no real option to carry anything over from the old formula into the turbocharged downsized formula.
Luca Marmorini wrote:A 4-cylinder design would require a complete overhaul of the chassis designs.
Luca seems to have a point here as the chassis design of the last 20 years was geared towards V engines with 8-12 cylinders and predominantly 90° V-angle. But again a careful examination reveals that F1 is embarking on a completely new chassis design concept anyway. The new chassis are supposed to have ground effect and side pots which are coming much more forward to protect the driver against side impact. Both points have a huge impact on chassis design. There will be more floor area further forward reducing the necessity to have big front wings. There is also the option to have dedicated venturi channels as used by the the American Champ Cars for many years. The slimmer L4 engine format would be beneficial to a chassis design with venturis. So again it turns out that Marmorini's point is not standing up to examination. It simply masks the fact that Ferrari serve their own agenda like everyone else in F1.
The lopping off of two cylinders was last proposed and executed in 2005 and it turned out to be a totally different engine according to the experts at that time. And those were both port injected NA engines that were on very similar rev levels and internal pressures. This time there would probably not be a single part to carry over. Not even the spark plugs.

Does the Ferrari proposal still look sensible after that bit of a technical analysis?
Last edited by WhiteBlue on 09 Sep 2010, 16:32, edited 1 time in total.
Formula One's fundamental ethos is about success coming to those with the most ingenious engineering and best .............................. organization, not to those with the biggest budget. (Dave Richards)