There's no way you have use for 3.5 Bar at 7000 Rpm either, when fuel-flow is reduced to 18.9 g/second,ringo wrote: ...
This 3.5bar boost pressure is intended for low engine speeds; like 7000rpm!
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I'm convinced of quite the contrary. I think this highly specified engines will all be very similar. At least that is what the constructor dominated F1 commission intended for them. After a short period of small differences in performance and reliability will will see a rapid exhaustion of the development potential and the gradual freeze. F1 is screwed with an aerodynamic superiority as long as the constructors will control the technical rules. It will be very boring compared to the coming development race in LMP1.ringo wrote:... very interesting months ahead for these new engines in terms of getting to know strong points and weaknesses between them too.
It's just an average value. Maybe they use much higher flow rate for acceleration above traction limit at certain spots.xpensive wrote:There's no way you have use for 3.5 Bar at 7000 Rpm either, when fuel-flow is reduced to 18.9 g/second
No it's not, I suggest you read FIA's 2014 Technical regulations, in particular Article 5.1.timbo wrote:It's just an average value. Maybe they use much higher flow rate for acceleration above traction limit at certain spots.xpensive wrote:There's no way you have use for 3.5 Bar at 7000 Rpm either, when fuel-flow is reduced to 18.9 g/second
I'm with you on this on WB. The fuel rule is set and pretty much un-cheat able with today's technology.WhiteBlue wrote:I have been trying to convince a minority of users that it will be impossible to cheat the fuel flow control. But to no avail. Some seem to think there are loop holes, which I frankly don't understand considering the rules and the publications we had on control technology.
It says 100kg/h only. What's the problem if you use 50kg in 10 minutes and 50kg left in the 50 minutes?xpensive wrote:No it's not, I suggest you read FIA's 2014 Technical regulations, in particular Article 5.1.timbo wrote:It's just an average value. Maybe they use much higher flow rate for acceleration above traction limit at certain spots.xpensive wrote:There's no way you have use for 3.5 Bar at 7000 Rpm either, when fuel-flow is reduced to 18.9 g/second
The problem is that this would be 300 kg/h fuel flow for 10 minutes.timbo wrote:What's the problem if you use 50kg in 10 minutes(...)
The regulation does not say that 100 kg may be consumed in an arbitrary way over one hour. It says that the flow rate resulting to 100 kg/h must not be exceeded. That is a completely different thing. The flow rate will be monitored by sensors that work on the analogue principle and work cumulatively. That means the flow rate cannot be manipulated without detection.timbo wrote:It says 100kg/h only. What's the problem if you use 50kg in 10 minutes and 50kg left in the 50 minutes?xpensive wrote:No it's not, I suggest you read FIA's 2014 Technical regulations, in particular Article 5.1.timbo wrote:It's just an average value. Maybe they use much higher flow rate for acceleration above traction limit at certain spots.
I don't see this as cheating.
what you call a flow rate of 100 kg/h must be exceeded intermittentlyWhiteBlue wrote: The regulation does not say that 100 kg may be consumed in an arbitrary way over one hour. It says that the flow rate resulting to 100 kg/h must not be exceeded. That is a completely different thing. The flow rate will be monitored by sensors that work on the analogue principle and work cumulatively. That means the flow rate cannot be manipulated without detection.