You have the tail wagging with the dog. The fuel mass flow restriction and the race fuel allocation is driving everything in the 2014 regulations. If the fuel wasn't regulated there would be no effort to have energy recovery. It is still much simpler to burn chemical energy than to recover. It takes a lot less weight and brain to do.turbof1 wrote:With the energy recovering systems being massively more used next year, I'd guess fuel consumption would naturally fall down anyway. Give or take they loose 33% of total fuel amount, that seems doable. Might even be that it isn't an issue at all and that they don't have to conserve more then this year. The limit of 15,000 rpm also helps with that.
I disagree WB, I find this most interesting. How will the 100 kg cap over the race-distance be governed, will each car be given precisely 100 kg at the start, or can they fuel-up as much as they like and have the total calculated by the mass-flow control-device, why we will know after the race if they made it?WhiteBlue wrote:Yeah, storm in a tea cup as usual.
The fuel flow rate is there to limit power and to push efficiency goals. If there wasn't a fuel flow limit there would have been a boost limit as well as the rev limit the have. Actually, they probably didn't need to have the RPM limit at all in the fuel flow formula.Dragonfly wrote:I see many here are hailing the fuel mass flow restriction. But as a fan of the sport I can't understand the reasons. If there is a total cap on fuel per race why the need to measure and control the flow every odd millisecond?
It is interesting how this will be achieved.xpensive wrote:I disagree WB, I find this most interesting. How will the 100 kg cap over the race-distance be governed, will each car be given precisely 100 kg at the start, or can they fuel-up as much as they like and have the total calculated by the mass-flow control-device, why we will know after the race if they made it?WhiteBlue wrote:Yeah, storm in a tea cup as usual.
By Charlie I guess you mean Whiting. So, did he tell you what happens if the accumulated flow xceeds 100 kg with one lap to go?WhiteBlue wrote:Mass flow rate according to the manufacturer.
Charlie has already told us that the fuel cap is set for the mass flow device. Teams are allowed to over fill.
The car will be disqualified!xpensive wrote:By Charlie I guess you mean Whiting. So, did he tell you what happens if the accumulated flow xceeds 100 kg with one lap to go?WhiteBlue wrote:Mass flow rate according to the manufacturer.
Charlie has already told us that the fuel cap is set for the mass flow device. Teams are allowed to over fill.
So what's the point of overfilling then?Blanchimont wrote: ...
The car will be disqualified!
...
There is no point. The 100 kg limit will obviously according to the FiA's Charlie Whiting be monitored by the mass flow device and you can over fill according to the same source.xpensive wrote:So what's the point of overfilling then?Blanchimont wrote:...The car will be disqualified!...
And IMO they do not need to have any other limit in a fuel cap formula - not on fuel mass flow, not on boost. The limits will be imposed naturally by the teams themselves.wuzak wrote:The fuel flow rate is there to limit power and to push efficiency goals. If there wasn't a fuel flow limit there would have been a boost limit as well as the rev limit the have. Actually, they probably didn't need to have the RPM limit at all in the fuel flow formula.Dragonfly wrote:I see many here are hailing the fuel mass flow restriction. But as a fan of the sport I can't understand the reasons. If there is a total cap on fuel per race why the need to measure and control the flow every odd millisecond?