From the F2012 thread.
hardingfv32 wrote:khizerk wrote:Now, as bhallg2k stated.....
"Because the accelerator is at 80% rather than 50% in that corner, the engine burns fuel a rate corresponding to 80%, which means the engine outputs exhaust at a rate corresponding to 80%. That's the aerodynamic benefit part."
This is a half baked statement.
1) The accelerator setting does not correlate directly with engine rpms. You can be at 100% accelerator at 5k rpms, launching, or 100% accelerator at 18k rpm, on the straight. Air volume through the engine is related to rpm and throttle setting.
2) The fuel delivery setting does not correlate directly with the accelerator setting. The engine map controls the fuel delivery using throttle setting, rpm, temp, etc. You are not going to get 'engine outputs exhaust at a rate corresponding to 80%'.
Brian
Casting aside the idea that I think you're just being difficult...
1. No one has said that accelerator settings correlate directly with engine RPM. Accelerator travel is required to correlate with
torque demand. 5.5.6 just specifies an area where deviations from the normal map may occur, and it defines this area as a specific RPM + accelerator travel range.
2. No sh*t. That's what this entire conversation has been about.
EDIT:
hardingfv32 wrote:bhallg2k wrote:Deviate, deviate, deviate, deviate. That's an important word you're strategically ignoring here.
Please expand? Where is the word deviate found in 5.5.6?
Brian
It's found in my explanation and is crucial to it.