It equates to 60-90hp (based on 600hp ICE).Tommy Cookers wrote:10-15 % is much more than the recent corrected figure from Ringo
How does that work?Tommy Cookers wrote:these calculations don't appear to me to address the loss of crankshaft power that becomes significant with higher recovery
As the RPM rises the requirement for the compressor become less (same mass flow, less boost), while the power the turbine makes will be roughly equal (same mass flow), falling a few percent. Thus the excess power (turbine power less compressor power) should, at minimum, remain equal or increase.
Energy recovery will not come at the expense of crankshaft power.
If you get 20hp from recovery and lose 10hp from the crankshaft then you are ahead 10hp, and the efficiency is better - ie you use less fuel to get the same hp, or more hp from the same amount of fuel.Tommy Cookers wrote:in F1 it won't be worth chasing all possible recovery
(adding 20 hp to recovery but losing 10 hp crankshaft power is no good, although in a stationary engine it might be ok)