Assuming it's reliable enough and not way too expensive to build & maintain, i suppose it could workallstaruk08 wrote:maybe it ties in with Toyota's WEC program and the changes in regs for the 2014 season. they're having fuel flow meters instead of engine size, type of fuel, turbos or superchargers, so maybe the 1.6L V6 turbo is best suited for WEC aswell as Formula 1.
there is no sign of a changerjsa wrote:Some discussions around the forum made it pretty clear that currently teams burn fuel during braking to counter the effect of kers harvesting, resulting in the engine delivering zero torque.
It obviously annihilates the intent of using kers since you re are just burning fuel to charge it. Anyone knows if the farce will go on with the new rules?
From 2007 onwards the FIM regulated that engines are limited a maximum fuel capacity of 21 litres in MotoGP™ class with the exception of participating CRT teams that are allowed 2 more litres of fuel than factory teams.Tommy Cookers wrote: there's no sign of a change on this issue (but Moto GP has been doing this for years eg currently 41 litres, 2014 40 litres)
I don't think the energy recovered by KERS is always compensated to achieve an overall zero torque; there is some amount of fuel being burnt, but there is some negative torque, otherwise there wouldn't be any engine braking. And also on braking there has to be a lot of negative torque since the pilots take something like 4-6g-s for 600kg of car+pilot, it's not like the negative torque of a KERS would be so important that one would need to compensate. I may be wrong though.Tommy Cookers wrote:there is no sign of a changerjsa wrote:Some discussions around the forum made it pretty clear that currently teams burn fuel during braking to counter the effect of kers harvesting, resulting in the engine delivering zero torque.
It obviously annihilates the intent of using kers since you re are just burning fuel to charge it. Anyone knows if the farce will go on with the new rules?
the fuel rate rules strictly limit the fuel rate when the IC engine is driving the car in the normal way
but do not reduce that limit when the driver has lifted off the accelerator and the engine needs no fuel
this amounts to free fuel for running the engine to generate electricity
if there was also a limit of fuel load this would make the cars greener, and they would be seen as greener
(but this could cause a perception of racing spoilt by fuel saving)
there's no sign of a change on this issue (but Moto GP has been doing this for years eg currently 41 litres, 2014 40 litres)
we know that engines are allowed to produce zero (rather than negative) torque whenever the driver is off the acceleratorautogyro wrote:As long as they continue to harvest energy from the nose of the crankshaft .......