According to Renault, Renault powered cars can run with 15 to 18L less fuel.
How much advantage is that per lap?
http://www.planet-f1.com/driver/18227/7 ... -less-gas-
what about the impact of the extra fuel load on tire wear?NonNewtonic wrote:From these stats it seems like Mercedes is te best choice in terms of fuel efficiency and HP. Although Renault is the most fuel economic engine put they are about 5 to 6 HP short compared to Mercedes
Where was this sourced?ESPImperium wrote: In 2009 the fuel to the average first stop values were as follows:
Mercedes FO108W 60.6
Ferrari 056 65.9
BMW P86/9 64.1
Renault RS27-2009 58.2
Toyota RVX-09 64.2
(All values in Kg and were when refueling was permitted)
I think (though I don't know) that this was calculated based on post-qualifying fuel weights. I think (possibly) ESPI went and took all the Renault engine runners; and compared the lap on which they did their first stop; versus the post-qualifying fuel weight - 605 (the then-minimumweight of the cars)JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Where was this sourced?ESPImperium wrote: In 2009 the fuel to the average first stop values were as follows:
Mercedes FO108W 60.6
Ferrari 056 65.9
BMW P86/9 64.1
Renault RS27-2009 58.2
Toyota RVX-09 64.2
(All values in Kg and were when refueling was permitted)
And, If I may, what is the "fuel to the first stop" actually mean?
Is it influenced by strategy? ie short first stints, compared to longer ones?
Good point, yes, car + driver + fuelraymondu999 wrote:power to weight? I take it you mean weight in terms of fuel + engine? All the engines weigh 95kg
Yep; the weight difference would decrease linearly and ideally, in an ideal world; they'd all finish the races at 640kg.the EDGE wrote:Good point, yes, car + driver + fuelraymondu999 wrote:power to weight? I take it you mean weight in terms of fuel + engine? All the engines weigh 95kg
assuming the merc cars start about 12kg heavier and have an extra 15HP, obviously the fuel will decrease whilst the HP should remain constant
raymondu999 wrote:Yep; the weight difference would decrease linearly and ideally, in an ideal world; they'd all finish the races at 640kg.the EDGE wrote:Good point, yes, car + driver + fuelraymondu999 wrote:power to weight? I take it you mean weight in terms of fuel + engine? All the engines weigh 95kg
assuming the merc cars start about 12kg heavier and have an extra 15HP, obviously the fuel will decrease whilst the HP should remain constant