Scarbs said it was confirmed from ex Renault employees that it all goes under the car. Some goes under and outside of the floor and then curves back in under the floor.marcush. wrote:far left you can see the exhaust outlet..there is no directing over the floor it is all aimed to go below ..
dren wrote:Scarbs said it was confirmed from ex Renault employees that it all goes under the car. Some goes under and outside of the floor and then curves back in under the floor.marcush. wrote:far left you can see the exhaust outlet..there is no directing over the floor it is all aimed to go below ..
I think those are expansion tanks for the radiators. When the cooling fluid heats up due to the heat given out by the engine, it expands. If it stays confined in the radiator, pressure inside builds up and it bursts. If the coolant has somewhere to go - an expansion tank - it will flow there and sit in the tank, and the pressure in the radiator will stay stable.nacho wrote:What is that aluminum "bottles" purpose?
Expansion tanks are usually placed above other members of cooling system.bot6 wrote:I think those are expansion tanks for the radiators. When the cooling fluid heats up due to the heat given out by the engine, it expands. If it stays confined in the radiator, pressure inside builds up and it bursts. If the coolant has somewhere to go - an expansion tank - it will flow there and sit in the tank, and the pressure in the radiator will stay stable.nacho wrote:What is that aluminum "bottles" purpose?
Once the engine cools down, the coolant contracts again and the excess coolant from before, sitting in the expansion tank, gets "sucked back" into the system.
I think they'll need much bigger drink bottles, sitting essentially in the middle of 1 MW heater.manchild wrote:That bottle seams to be containing something very sensitive, it's welded stainless steel.
My wild guess would be liquid nitrogen whose release the driver can activate when exhaust overheats itself, radiators, floor or sidepod under safety car. A liquid nitrogen spray can with probably multiple muzzles.
If it is however in one sidepod only, than I'd say - a drink bottle in nice place to keep it cool, and reduce cog.
For me it looks more like 150-200 atm of pressure and reduction valve in front of the bottle.bot6 wrote:marekk -> F1 cooling systems are pre-pressurized. They have to be at a pressure higher than ambiant, for the reasons you mentioned but also to avoid fluctuations in pressure due to the Gs caused by acceleration, braking and cornering. Therefore, gravity is not the limiting factor in the positioning of the expansion tank, as there are higher forces to counteract.
Usually, the way these systems are pressurized is by injecting an inert gas into the expansion tank at the desired pressure, with a membrane separating the two fluids.
So essentially, you're right, it is a pressurized tank, but it's also an expansion tank. I just didn't want to get into too much detail about pressurized cooling systems.
The plug pulled just at the right time could help overtaking though! Now there's an idea! I'm off to email Bernie ...marekk wrote:For me it looks more like 150-200 atm of pressure and reduction valve in front of the bottle.bot6 wrote:marekk -> F1 cooling systems are pre-pressurized. They have to be at a pressure higher than ambiant, for the reasons you mentioned but also to avoid fluctuations in pressure due to the Gs caused by acceleration, braking and cornering. Therefore, gravity is not the limiting factor in the positioning of the expansion tank, as there are higher forces to counteract.
Usually, the way these systems are pressurized is by injecting an inert gas into the expansion tank at the desired pressure, with a membrane separating the two fluids.
So essentially, you're right, it is a pressurized tank, but it's also an expansion tank. I just didn't want to get into too much detail about pressurized cooling systems.
A little to hot here for liquid nitrogen.