Ilmor ran direct injected F1 engines up to about 17,000 rpm years ago without a loss in power and a 5% gain in fuel efficiency, and this was with a fuel pressure of only 150 bar. Back then it was difficult to find suitable injectors for the purpose, since then a lot have happened in that area.Holm86 wrote:Okay didnt think of that. But i know that direct injection can have problems keeping up in high revs. Remember reading a article on the Porsche Spyder LMP2 car a few years back where the biggest challenge was getting the direct injection system to work at 12.000 rpm.
But i believe that will be one of the areas that can be developed in F1. A few years and they should be able to run max revs on direct injection alone.
Ceramics are in general a bad idea unless we talk about small wear or heat resistant parts like turbine wheels, balls for bearings, plungers for high pressure fuel pumps and such.Ian P. wrote:I'm just disapointed that they didn't allow ceramic components. This engine design is all about thermodynamic efficiency and ceramics are likely one way to gain it.
Trying to insulate the combustion chamber is a bad idea, it just increase exhaust temperature, knocking and reduce volumetric efficiency.
Ceramics have very high compressive strengths but their tensile strength is low. In tension a ceramic part fail by fast fracture and there is no way to tell when that is going to happen with a certain part (unlike with metals were fatigue can be predicted). Also, the larger the part, the greater the chance that there is a material defect in the ceramic part that can initiate the failure.
Normally you get a greater cooling effect by injecting the fuel directly into the cylinder. That is one reason why direct injected engine are less prone to knock.xpensive wrote:I am pretty convinced that the cooling effect of the fuel injection will be more efficient the more upstream you can do it?
Mixture preparation can however suffer due to the short time availible for mixing.
Intercooling is useful in keeping the engine cool and improving volumetric efficiency, but it doesn't have to have a positive effect on engine efficiency.ringo wrote:I think it will be worth it.
Intercooling is the key word in turbo efficiency. If they don't have it, then it would be a complete gimmick to have electric pit lane running in the name of saving energy.
The tiles used on the bottom of the space shuttle insulate well because they are 90% air. Think of them like plastic foam but instead of plastic they are made from silica with a black borosilicate coating.xpensive wrote:Ceramics are used for thermal insulation, like the bottom of the space-shuttle, but they don't "absorb" anything.
Since ceramics with poor heat conduction tend to crack when they are heated (or cooled) the heat shield is "precracked" by using several small tiles instead of one large heat shield.