What I think should be further investigated is to eliminate liquid as energy-conveyor, perhaps the Honda air-cooled
but fan-less 1968 Ra 302 had a point there?
the big issue there is you need to direct air to the critical areas very preciselyxpensive wrote:What I think should be further investigated is to eliminate liquid as energy-conveyor, perhaps the Honda air-cooled
but fan-less 1968 Ra 302 had a point there?
I think apart from BMW and Honda in the motorcycle business not much in terms of calculation ...xpensive wrote:I don't know much about relevant numbers here, but high-revving motorcyles was air-cooled for a long time, no?
marcush,marcush. wrote: the big issue there is you need to direct air to the critical areas very precisely
to arrive at a useful temperature distribution on the engine without creating too much of backpressure inside the ducting but sure there is potential.Mind you the engine already transfers a lot of waste heat directly to ambient not through oil and water .With a mandatory weight of the engine I see not much reason why you could not have a fair bit of cooling ribs and air passages in the engine to enhance aircooling of the unit ....this could help reduce radiator size as well..
The Porsche 917/10 and 917/30 Can-Am cars were actually "oil-cooled" to some xtent, with a massive oil-flowmarcush. wrote:ssome Porsche Sportscars in the late 70s had watercooled cylinderheads and still retained the aircooled liners .If it was feasible back then ...I´m pretty sure the Turbo CanAm monsters had not much watercoolinmg going on ,did they?
marcush,marcush. wrote:riff raff ,
one big difference is the huge device pushing air thru that engine compartment +vehicle speed ...
Can't see anything wrong with this cooling fan. On a demonstration car it's probably a good addition since speeds can be lower than on track, and you don't have to have people running around with fans.hardingfv32 wrote:This is a demonstration or display car. Look at the quality of the fan mounting system. Also, the ground surface looks like something you might find in a plaza or display room.
Brian
If we look at aircraft engines, aircooled engines always had much lower bmeps than liquid cooled engines. The cooling performance also dropped off for each row of cylinders added while a liquid cooled engine could use 6 cylinders after each other without problem. This is also a reason why the V2 configuration became popular for motorcycles, it worked well with air cooling. Aircooled engines are usually restricted to two valves per cylinder.riff_raff wrote: marcush,
The big Pratt & Whitney air-cooled radial piston aircraft achieved massive heat rejection rates. These engines had huge cylinder volumes, were supercharged to very high bmep rates, and had up to 4 rows of cylinders, using 1940's technology. I'm sure much better results could be achieved using 21st century materials and design tools. Check out the fin density of these air-cooled cylinders:
As for the engine coolant system:
"7.5 Coolant header tank :
The coolant header tank on the car must be fitted with an FIA approved pressure relief valve which is set to a maximum of 3.75 bar gauge pressure, details of the relief valve may be found in the Appendix to these regulations. If the car is not fitted with a header tank, an alternative position must be approved by the FIA.
7.6 Cooling systems :
The cooling systems of the engine must not intentionally make use of the latent heat of vaporisation of any fluid.
At one time, I believe only water was allowed as a coolant. I don't know if that is still true.
riff_raff
The fan appears to be a standard aftermarket fan with a standard aftermarket installation. The fan is probably intended to supply some flow when the car is stationary or running at low speed.marcush. wrote:Two things there :
a racing car would never need a grid /finger guard-that alone will account for a loss of 2-4%of airflow...cannot imagine anyone in competition would sacrifice any perfromance .
Also a straight fanblade is much more efficient than those banana shapes..these are just for noise .Hardly a point of discussion in a f1 application.That fan is a convenience fit .Not engineered ..it´s there because it physically fits and it delays the overheating just enough for the job the car has to perform,in that sense there is nothing wrong with it .Still the electric drive will suffer big time under the temperature loads imposed by the application -a f1 car should have a fair bit more than 120°C downstream airtemps when current road cars with separate radiators are above 110°C these days.And in my book this is more an engine bay installation anyways ..and this is 120°C for a bone standard street car....Not suited that pretend drive(works a few hours at best)
My data shows significantly higher air temps .Coolant temps of 90°C are non existant in modern cars..Edis wrote:The fan appears to be a standard aftermarket fan with a standard aftermarket installation. The fan is probably intended to supply some flow when the car is stationary or running at low speed.marcush. wrote:Two things there :
a racing car would never need a grid /finger guard-that alone will account for a loss of 2-4%of airflow...cannot imagine anyone in competition would sacrifice any perfromance .
Also a straight fanblade is much more efficient than those banana shapes..these are just for noise .Hardly a point of discussion in a f1 application.That fan is a convenience fit .Not engineered ..it´s there because it physically fits and it delays the overheating just enough for the job the car has to perform,in that sense there is nothing wrong with it .Still the electric drive will suffer big time under the temperature loads imposed by the application -a f1 car should have a fair bit more than 120°C downstream airtemps when current road cars with separate radiators are above 110°C these days.And in my book this is more an engine bay installation anyways ..and this is 120°C for a bone standard street car....Not suited that pretend drive(works a few hours at best)
Curved blades tend to offer higher flow at low pressure ratios at the cost of less airflow at higher pressure ratios, but the difference isn't that great. That is also the case of finger guards vs. no finger guards.
The air temperature exiting the radiator will be a fair bit below 120 degC which is about the coolant temperature exiting the radiator. For a standard car you have an air temperature of about 60 degC after the radiator with a coolant temperature of 90 degC, although the air temperature can increase at standstill. Still, I would not expect any temperature related issues with the fan aside from possibly some reduction in life expectancy but that is hardly a problem for a F1 car.