ringo wrote:Whiteblue didn't we go through that calculation already? It's possible with current direct injection technology.
I don't understand what you are talking about. Of course you can run an engine with direct injection at 18,000 rpm. But that is not the issue I'm talking about. The question is how you run the engine with maximum power on a limited fuel budget and fuel flow.
IMO that requires a combustion process with the highest possible fuel efficiency. That would be the spray guided process which uses very high injection pressure and outward opening nozzles. It is pioneered by Bosch and state of the art is 200 bar and 9,000 rpm. To speed this process up even further you obviously need to increase the pressure (and likely also the injector actuator speed). The published set of specs going from 200 to 500 bar and raising revs from 9,000 to 12,000 fits neatly with that theory.
We really need to focus on the point that it will be much easier to extract high power from limited fuel at lower revs using the turbo compressor to build up torque instead of building the power by revs.
IMO the release of higher revs by the FiA for the V6 engines is a simple act on paper to appease the noise lovers. The injection pressure limit is not increased at the same time which is a clear hint that this is simply a red herring. The engines IMO are not going to run in that rev band and my opinion is shared by some race engine specialists in another technical forum.
There are obviously ways and means to crack the current situation for Ecclestone and the V8 noise lovers. They must try to get a very low boost limit or they can try to stop the implementation of the 100kg/h fuel flow limit. I'm not sure that the fuel flow limit is set in stone.
It is most likely fixed in the agreement between the manufacturers that preceded the F1 commission vote for the V6 engines. But it is not clear weather the fuel flow limit has also passed the F1 commission. If it has not passed it would be subject to the same challenge as the I4 decision of the FiA was. That is actually my biggest concern at the moment.
donskar wrote:Long life engines save money -- no argument -- but only AFTER they go through a very expensive design and development cycle. I wonder about the real savings? Especially since all engine manufacturers will continue to develop -- and spend -- along the margins of the rules.
The manufacturers have apparently covered this issue by agreeing on a resource limitation for engine development. According to previous comments from Cosworth there will be an annual homologation of the power train. Year by year they are supposed to liberate aspects that will further improve the fuel efficiency. This may not only cover the engines but also the energy recovery systems.
Pierce89 wrote:I wish they would allow fully electric turbos, where the turbine just sins a generator wich charges a battery which in turn powers the compressor. From what I've read this reduces lag greatly because the battery always has power, even at low revs, and the compressor is not saddled with the extra weight and inertia of the turbine
According to latest info they will have one unit which will have a compressor, a turbine and an MGU on one shaft. The MGU will be allowed to feed electric power to the rear wheel MGU but not to the battery. It is not clear if the turbo MGU is allowed to use battery power to spool up the compressor. That may come at a later time.