rjsa wrote:Where is the fuel/rpm ramp in the rules? That piece is pretty bullet proof.
5.1.4 Fuel mass flow must not exceed 100kg/h.
5.1.5 Below 10500rpm the fuel mass flow must not exceed Q (kg/h) = 0.009 N(rpm)+ 5.5.
We already had this discussion. Due to the nature of the intermittent operation of the injection system variations in very small time units well under one second for instance in the millisecond order are not relevant for this regulation. People have to be a bit sensible and use common sense.Tommy Cookers wrote: a flow rate exceding 100 kg/h must be exceeded intermittently
100 kg/h is eg 27.8 gm/sec, 27.8 mg'msec, and 27.8 microgram/microsec
if the engine must not ever in any microsecond use more than 27.8 microgram it cannot run
unless it has carburettors or continuous fuel injection
so there needs to be a hard definition of fuel rate
eg max 27.8 gm in any period of 1 second
or max 2.78 gm in any period of 100 msec
etc
and a hard definition of the place of this activity
the degree of fuel accumulation (as you call it) is maybe something the rule makers have already considered
after their lavish allowance of fuel to serve electrical accumulation when driver torque demand is not full
That aspect has nothing to do with the ability to monitor the flow rate in time frames that really matter. If you integrate the flow rate measured by an analogue system you can measure the flow rate to any desired degree of accuracy even if the injection is operated intermittently.