The exhaust turbine is the furthest from the engine. The intake on the compressor goes underneath the intake box. The compressor outlet is pointing towards the back of the picture. Exhaust turbine intake is pointing down in this picture towards where the gear box would be.WhiteBlue wrote:n smikle wrote:matt21 wrote:dren wrote:So, maybe I'm looking at this wrong, but is the exhaust turbine the furthest one from the engine? It almost looks like the intake is the round opening for the compressor, and then it directly compresses the air box/cooler.
Maybe the 6 into 1 is better for ICE performance?
Tommy Cookers wrote:the normal and natural characteristic of an electric drive would amount to some or other degree of resistance to wheelspin (also some skid resistance with generation under braking)
So there should also be possibility to give up that mandatory triangular piece of bodywork from behind the the airbox entry to the gearbox. Even in 2012 cars bodywork at the rear was slimmer than this mandatory shape which resulted in ugly fins (for example Williams). I dream about something like the modern incarnation of Brabham BT55.matt21 wrote:So I would say that the airbox as known today could be given up.
I think you'd want a very useable power band that also has high power output. I don't see this changing much between races. Maybe make the MCUH power harvest more gradual on a track like Monaco. What do teams do now?Ferraripilot wrote:This sounds massively complicated, but tuning a harvest for a circuit could prove benficial, especially if all other powertrains on a circuit are running 100% output on both systems and simply relying on a driver to keep slip from occuring.
That renault engine looks like a systematic representation. The dead giveaway is the intercooler location. I feel this is just like to say what connects to what on the engine.markc wrote:Renault engine here: (racecar-engineering) http://www.racecar-engineering.com/news ... f1-engine/ringo wrote:... Does anyone have an image of the Renault concept hanging around...
Very interesting! I had previously assumed the airbox redundant thanks to the turbo (...and being too lazy to check rules), but looking at Merc, Renault and PURE (defunct but still interesting) designs I see it's footprint engine side still there...? Digging further I can see the rules mandate the airbox inlet still above the drivers head... I consider myself schooled in the matter!
Renault have shown more ancillaries attached - airbox direct to turbo, and a box where the airbox would have terminated in the NA engines of old. Merc has the airbox terminating in the NA fashion but feeding the turbo air, with the same structure also handing the pressured air inlet to engine (chambered one assumes). Intercooler in the box? or is that's position mandated ala turbo?
Air to water may be used but i don't think a team will opt to. An F1 car already has such minimal volume and is packaged so well that the advantages seen with air to water coolers on bigger vehicles may not be seen on an F1 car, which basically has no internal room for your water heat exchanger. Keep in mind that with air to water, you will still need an aditional heat exchanger which will be in the form of a radiator in the side pods i guess.matt21 wrote:
The rules mandate a maximum of two air intakes located between the front of the cockpit and 500mm before the rear axle and more than 200mm above the reference plane.
So I would say that the airbox as known today could be given up.
The position of the intercoolers is not mandated and you can use air-to-water-coolers. So why not placing it in the box.
200 mm above reference plane? even the cockpit bulkhead is 625 mm above the reference plane.matt21 wrote:
The rules mandate a maximum of two air intakes located between the front of the cockpit and 500mm before the rear axle and more than 200mm above the reference plane.
It is a concept picture for journalists to publish, with probably their earliest ideas in graphical form. Quiet sure that the arrangement as per the picture is not going to be acceptable to any of the F1 designers.Holm86 wrote:So anyone got a clue??Holm86 wrote:But why do Mercedes reveal pictures of a complete engine this soon?? To put pressure on FIA to keep the engine regulations for 2014??
torque would only be maximum at 0 rpm if the voltage supplied to the motor was fixed (that's primitive)Ferraripilot wrote:Tommy Cookers wrote:the normal and natural characteristic of an electric drive would amount to some or other degree of resistance to wheelspin (also some skid resistance with generation under braking)
One would think just the opposite with electric drive considering torque is pretty much instantly maximum output from 0 rpm.