I am not sure if I understand what you mean, but if I interpret you correctly, you mean that if you hold the accelerator pedal at 100% starting from 14k rpm, article 5.5.3 won't allow any reduction in torque demand. Is that correct?gato azul wrote:@Stradivarius
5.5.5 does not apply any longer after you reach 100% throttle pedal position, therefore 5.5.3 deals with this condition (and 0% throttle separate).
If you apply 100% accelerator pedal position and hold the pedal there, at let's say 14k rpm, and you only had 5.5.5. you could do what you like, reduce torque demand as you see fit while transitioning through the rpm range from 14-18k rpm,
because you don't increase accelerator pedal position after 14k rpm, so you are not longer governed by 5.5.5. under this condition, ergo you have no obligation to increase torque demand.
I don't think that this is the case. I don't really know at what engine speed the maximum torque is acchieved, but I am quite sure that it is at some engine speed lower than 18k rpm, which is the maximum engine speed allowed. There is nothing in the rules, as far as I can see, that prevents the torque demand to decrease with an increasing engine speed. In fact, article 5.5.6 specifically allows for a reduction of 0.030 Nm / rpm. This means that if you have, let's say 350 Nm at 14k rpm, the rules allow you to have 320 Nm at 15k rpm. This would be the result of a steady gradient of -0.030 Nm / rpm between 14k rpm and 15 k rpm.
But more importantly, article 5.5.5, doesn't say anything about any requirements to how the torque demand should vary when the engine speed changes. It only deals with how the torque demand should depend on the accelerator pedal travel position.