The turbo will be oil cooled. And that will heat up the oil a lot more than a N/A engine.xpensive wrote:I fail should why oil-temperatures should be higher in an 12 kRpm V6 than in an 18 kRpm V8, unless you want it to in order to increase efficiency of the cooler by boosting the delta T between oil and air, thus reducing the size of the cooler.
This is what Renault did in the 90s with their V10, allowing it to run hotter to get the water temperature up so Williams, read Adrian Newey, could design the cars with smaller radiators and thus more aerodynamically efficient.
I'm pretty sure they already run coolant temperatures over 100°C.ringo wrote:If they could get the coolant to run at 100 degrees C they would. They simply want to have a lower delta T through the radiators so as to have them as small as possible.
I thought that was a little strange also?Holm86 wrote:Scarbs mentioned that the MGU-H would help brake the engine. I think he's got the wrong idea there. He made it sound like the MGU-H would only charge the batteries during braking. He didn't mention the use of the MGU-H to control the boost.
Maybe confused MGUH with MGUK?pgfpro wrote:I thought that was a little strange also?Holm86 wrote:Scarbs mentioned that the MGU-H would help brake the engine. I think he's got the wrong idea there. He made it sound like the MGU-H would only charge the batteries during braking. He didn't mention the use of the MGU-H to control the boost.
No. Because he said that the turbo would help brake the engine. Which he also said sounded a bit strange to have the turbo braking the engine. To me it does not make any sense.wuzak wrote:Maybe confused MGUH with MGUK?pgfpro wrote:I thought that was a little strange also?Holm86 wrote:Scarbs mentioned that the MGU-H would help brake the engine. I think he's got the wrong idea there. He made it sound like the MGU-H would only charge the batteries during braking. He didn't mention the use of the MGU-H to control the boost.
Compression braking perhaps like a truck?Holm86 wrote:
No. Because he said that the turbo would help brake the engine. Which he also said sounded a bit strange to have the turbo braking the engine. To me it does not make any sense.
But that would imply the turbo creating boost. This would take energy from battery and not charge it. And that would be rather pointless IMO as you have the MGU-K to create sufficient engine braking when harvesting energy.djos wrote:Compression braking perhaps like a truck?Holm86 wrote:
No. Because he said that the turbo would help brake the engine. Which he also said sounded a bit strange to have the turbo braking the engine. To me it does not make any sense.
Anything on the new engines is far from given. Except the mandatory bits.bhallg2k wrote:There's a difference between the MGUH and the turbine itself, and it's far from given that teams will use the MGUH to control boost; some of us still think a relatively simple wastegate is the obvious solution. Otherwise, the connection between the MGUH and the turbine will be clutched (5.2.4), meaning the turbine can "spin freely," which it will after it's been spooled up by the MGUH under acceleration and before the MGUH applies back pressure under braking.
EDIT: djos beat me to it.
No. This is compression braking : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compressio ... gine_brakedjos wrote:Doesn't compression braking work by restricting exhaust flow off throttle?
If so then perhaps the turbo can be "braked" by the mguh generator acting in reverse as a motor?
I'm no engineer, just making assumptions based on very limited experience.