Can someone translate this from Hungarian?
It belongs in this thread but I have no clue what it is about
Thanks Ciro!Ciro Pabón wrote:...4. The energy stored is passed through the gadget in frame four and, I am really confused here, somehow passed to the power train. I would think this involves passing the electricity in reverse through the generator, but I do not know...
Actually, I think that the gadget in frame 2 is a DC/DC converter (I think it’s called “chopper” in English, it’s “hacheur” in French). That converter modules the mean voltage that passes through: it “opens and closes” the circuit in order to “cut” the voltage during a period of time and reduces the final mean voltage on the accumulator.Ciro Pabón wrote:Well, I am not translating, I am guessing. Or divining, I do not know. By the way, taking a second look, probably the gadget in frame 2 is an AC/DC converter (why would it have cooling fins if is an ECU? because they use a Pentium instead of an AMD?), because the thingy in frame 1 is probably an alternator.
I agree, Manchild. I think that Mikey wants to say that you can connect it to the engine or the brakes, even if he got wrong the law of energy and mass conservation. Probably the engine is an easier one and this is no regenerative-braking. After all, the cars seem to be anything but fuel efficient! What is it? 2 or 3 km/lt? No help on global warming from F1...manchild wrote:I still think since under 1 it says motor/generator it is basically dual function generator that acts as generator under braking and as motor when additional power is needed.
Anyway, I think that is either FIA or Allianz drawing with only text being changed to Hungarian.