gcdugas wrote:Well that is all very nice but unless you are willing to forfeit all the braking energy that would be captured by the front wheels, then you will have "drive shafts" at the front axle.
Again, not necessarily. You can mount the electric generators on the front wheels themselves. I repeat, the
unsprung weight would be a headache in any case, generators-on-wheels or drive shafts, whatever you chose (probably the shafts are a better option). The drive train and the cardan would be another "dead weight". Of course, anything is possible, but the question is if it is a winner design. As your poll suggests, rules are made to be changed, but racing constrains are hard to circumvent.
I find hard to believe 80% of the braking is done in the front wheels, but if you say so you must have a reason. I thought that the geometry of the suspension prevented some of the weight transfer (you can ask DaveKillens, I never "got the thread" about it very well).
Finally, the amount of recovered energy is abismally low. An optimized Prius recovers 30% of the braking energy. When it is converted to electricity and converted again to mechanical energy you get another 30% slash. This gives you 10% energy back. According to Prius site, at this car, optimized for energy recovery, it is equivalent to 1 liter of gas per 100 km of normal driving. The reason some people (like me) hopes for F1 to concentrate on this matter is because we also hope they can improve the efficiency of the system. Anyway, putting a lot of weight on the wheels for such a small improvement in energy (thinking about F1 cars as energy hogs) doesn't seem to be the best racing option. Another problem here (hey, I am playing "devil's advocate
, people have seen me arguing for the system) is that the 4WD introduces its own energy losses.
Of course, 10% recovered energy is better than nothing. However, you have to take in account that the proposed rules for 2008 (and the energy density and weight of most storage systems) restrict the amount of energy you can store (without converting the car into a truck weighing over 600 kg), so I believe that even if you use only the rear brakes to get it, you do not need a lot of input to fill the storage system very quickly.
I only hope your smart question (and my incomplete answer) will encourage the members of the forum to think about a thing that seems fantastic on theory and hard to engineer.
If you are right (why not?) and the 4WD is the logic answer, perhaps Audi would be interested in an F1 team. This would be nice. Perhaps they can take Williams position, once the last of the privateers is squeezed out...
Finally, you mentioned a controlled differential. In my ignorance I agree: this actually seems a winner design. Anyway, let me play the devil's part again (after all, we seem to be discussing this between the two of us, slow post day, I guess): do you really think pilots can take more lateral g's?