beelsebob wrote:So, the BBC's article on this has clarified why Jo Bauer considered it a rule breach...
The circumstances being talked about were not mid throttle position – they were full throttle, but with the engine still working up to max RPM. In these circumstances, the engine was producing less torque than it could, the idea being that the driver was able to stick his boot down, and the engine would produce a torque curve that (roughly) matched the amount of grip that would be available at any given speed. Essentially giving 1) traction control (or similar) 2) higher RPM compared to torque providing more gasses to blow the rear end under traction.
I actually now wonder how red bull were able to argue their way out of it.
1) in my opinion is false, traction control implies that there is some sort of logic that cuts down torque when wheelspin is detected, but goes to full power once the traction has regained, that is not what 30% flat torque reduction via engine mapping is, RB limited their engine power output at certain rpm range, it somewhat makes it easier for driver to control the traction, since there is a bit less umpf from the engine, but there is no automatic logic cutting the engine down and then bringing it back to full, the engine is just less powerful and that's it
as far as I know from reading the rules, teams are free to do that, they can tune up/down the engine output as they want, but they cannot change the ecu logic, and 5.5.3. has no relation to that whatsoever, 5.5.3. is about the accelerator pedal motion range, that is must correspond with engines CURRENT map, whether it is the normal or downtuned one, at 100% the engine must produce 100% of
mapped power
accelerator pedal has no relation to engine theoretical output whatsoever
2) is even muddier, fact is that the effect is midrpm range, and when you floor the accelerator at 14k rpm, you don't instantly get the airflow of 16k rpm, it simply does not work like that with piston internal combustion engines. On top of that, how will you benefit from that extra downforce while having up to 30% less torque? and you cannot use that effect in the braking zone too, because you will overheat the brakes in a heartbeat and put huge stress on the drivetrain itself, remember that sometimes race engineers will ask driver not to overlap brake/accelerator, and there is no time during racing when the driver is off the throttle not on the brakes, they follow each other with no gaps
and, if I was in place of that Jo Bauer, I would first ask for car telemetry, see where RB used that very specific rpm range, draw conclusion and then make the accusation, not just say something in lines of - this looks weird, they must be working around some rule or something, because they did that in the past, lets investigate. You do that BEFORE you release a statement to the press, else it looks like badmouthing just because...