*ahem* You were saying?The FIA's concern in Germany was that Red Bull were using reduced torque settings for a given engine speed. It felt these could act as a form of traction control, limiting wheelspin out of corners.
Like they suffered from losing the double diffuser, and suffered when the floor hole thing was clarified, and suffered at every other point that... oh, wait, they haven't suffered at all and have the reigning two-time world champion in their car.beelsebob wrote:You would have to assume, given that Red Bull were already caught violating the not-very-"new" rule that they would.GotNoClueAboutF1Tech wrote:Which teams will loose the most due to the recent change of rules about the engine mapping?
Let's not kid ourselves. I have no doubt losing those lost Red Bull performance over the field - but they have been good enough to bounce back all the time.thearmofbarlow wrote:Like they suffered from losing the double diffuser, and suffered when the floor hole thing was clarified, and suffered at every other point that... oh, wait, they haven't suffered at all and have the reigning two-time world champion in their car.beelsebob wrote:You would have to assume, given that Red Bull were already caught violating the not-very-"new" rule that they would.GotNoClueAboutF1Tech wrote:Which teams will loose the most due to the recent change of rules about the engine mapping?
How many others in the field were using systems similar enough to Red Bull's that they changed their ways before anyone else found out? I assume that there are no secrets in the paddock and that everyone is pushing the rules well beyond their intent.raymondu999 wrote:Let's not kid ourselves. I have no doubt losing those lost Red Bull performance over the field - but they have been good enough to bounce back all the time.
Helmholtz also retains alot of the energy until after the driver has come of the throttle(mapping), blowing the extra retained energy during the off throttle phase. The issue surrounding the mapping in Germany wasn't specific only to hockenheim either. The mapping is set aggressively for each track in a tailored manor as you'd expect.raymondu999 wrote:The Helmholtz provides a smooth transition between "on" and "off" throttle, in terms of exhaust gases. It's a partial "off throttle blowing" - in effect. The effect of adding the Helmholtz is in the same direction as the mapping - to keep stuff flowing out of the exhaust.
They debuted the Helmholtz in Silverstone IIRC - before said mapping.
Sauber I think...Have you heard them in slow to medium corners?GotNoClueAboutF1Tech wrote:This is obvious, but apparently they arent the only ones who might be influenced by those changes.beelsebob wrote:You would have to assume, given that Red Bull were already caught violating the not-very-"new" rule that they would.GotNoClueAboutF1Tech wrote:Which teams will loose the most due to the recent change of rules about the engine mapping?
Can you expand?JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:[we may still see Helmholtz exhausts, but it comes with losses that need to be offset against its merits.
thearmofbarlow wrote:Just from the article...
*ahem* You were saying?The FIA's concern in Germany was that Red Bull were using reduced torque settings for a given engine speed. It felt these could act as a form of traction control, limiting wheelspin out of corners.
What else needs be said?9.3 Traction control
No car may be equipped with a system or device which is capable of preventing the driven wheels from spinning under power or of compensating for excessive torque demand by the driver.
Any device or system which notifies the driver of the onset of wheel spin is not permitted.
That is not my understanding of it. I also do not have the figures, as I posted in reply to raymondu.hardingfv32 wrote:Can you expand?JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:[we may still see Helmholtz exhausts, but it comes with losses that need to be offset against its merits.
This is what I do not understand about what and how the FIA are planning on controlling. Say you change the exhaust system so it produces less mid range torque, is this allowed with the proposed controls?
Brian
It means whatever they decide it means. At this point I think you're asking patently stupid questions just to stir --- up.bhallg2k wrote:What does "excessive torque demand" mean if available torque for demand is limited?
If I could -1 that comment, I would. Really? Bhallg2k has offered many great posts - hence his high number. The question is valid.thearmofbarlow wrote:It means whatever they decide it means. At this point I think you're asking patently stupid questions just to stir --- up.bhallg2k wrote:What does "excessive torque demand" mean if available torque for demand is limited?