WOW !!!!Tommy Cookers wrote:FWIW I would now say 100kW (about 135 hp) typically ie much of the race time from the MGUH
we know the MGUH output will be driving the MGUK for much of the racetime, this saves on storage, efficiency and cooling
but I never knew how much recovery was possible with an SI engine, and how this improves efficiency (not power)
this 'backpressure operation' reduces the large loss of pressure and kinetic energies as the exhaust blows down from 8 bar
these losses are disproportionate as the great pressure and density difference causes supersonic flow and pressure drop
F1 CR will be much higher, but also mep/density will be higher so the blowdown losses are still high (unless we have backpressure)
as I see it, higher CR (although indisputably helping efficiency) means that the cylinder pressure is higher even at EV opening
unless the EV is opened later (though this seems possible)
with backpressure the blowdown may be from 9 bar Abs , but it's driving against a denser gas load now at maybe 2.7 bar Abs
which must be less lossy than eg N/A or 'no backpressure' blowdown from 8 bar Abs against maybe 1.05 bar Abs
FWIW it seems to me likely that the backpressure will be increased as rpm goes significantly above 10500
as it is the least bad option IMO for in-cylinder thermodynamics
and we now know that backpressure improves efficiency
yes there is an apparent obligation for electric power ie MGU-K motor action to be proportionate to ICE action
but that can be managed even with backpressure and recovery increasing at the high rpm end
I think there are big differences in road cars. They do not typically run on full throttle, so the power optimization is all wrong for them. The hybrid technology involved is quite expensive which may be the main reason. And finally have a look at engine life (Turbo and Valves). The F1 engine must cover 4.000-5.000 km while the road car engine is expected to do 200.000 km. I don't think you can do the huge back pressure for such a long time. Even the 7% recovery with stoichiometric combustion would probably be a hard job.pgfpro wrote:WOW !!!!
My calculations are far from this. I guess back to the calculator for me. lol
What I find crazy is the fact that these recovery HP figures are massive. If true... why didn't anyone since put this technology into the modern day road car. The benefits would be through the roof in fuel savings and performance???
the other compounded power cycles are totally different, because they use the sensible heat energy in the exhaustWhiteBlue wrote:
The target brake thermal efficiency of 45.7 % sounds pretty high but it is not an impossible target as other compounded power cycles have demonstrated. In electric power generation there are two stage gas/steam turbines used that reach 51% electric power efficiency. The comparable brake thermal efficiency is 52.6%.
And these are the data for the 88 Honda RA168E engine in race trim:
the backpressure running ( -delta P) gives no gain in powerpgfpro wrote: What I find crazy is the fact that these recovery HP figures are massive. If true... why didn't anyone since put this technology into the modern day road car. The benefits would be through the roof in fuel savings and performance???
!. I believe the figures I used are also from the SAE report:Tommy Cookers wrote:IIRC the RA168E did not race 2% rich, it had to use 8% rich for responseWhiteBlue wrote:
The target brake thermal efficiency of 45.7 % sounds pretty high but it is not an impossible target as other compounded power cycles have demonstrated. In electric power generation there are two stage gas/steam turbines used that reach 51% electric power efficiency. The comparable brake thermal efficiency is 52.6%.
And these are the data for the 88 Honda RA168E engine in race trim:
this is somewhere in the SAE paper
R rating is racing. Q rating is qualifying. So 2%+ seems correct.Rating .......................R...................Q
Both at IVP = 2.5 Bar & Peak Power Speed (NP) = 12,500RPM
Mixture strength (relative to Stoichiometric)
.................................+2%.................+15%
Peak Power (PP) BHP....... 611..................676 +10.5%
Specific Fuel Consumption (SFC) (Lb. Of fuel)/BHP. Hour
.................................0.467................0.523 ≈+12%
Well, i'm very quiet on this, reason being i'm very cautious about apply those figures to an automotive engine and expect similar results. The aircraft operates in a very low pressure environment, with very low temperatures, maybe below zero at altitude and possibly steady speed. I wouldn't be so keen to apply the figures to a car that runs in a 1 atmosphere environment at normal temperatures.pgfpro wrote:
WOW !!!!
My calculations are far from this. I guess back to the calculator for me. lol
What I find crazy is the fact that these recovery HP figures are massive. If true... why didn't anyone since put this technology into the modern day road car. The benefits would be through the roof in fuel savings and performance???
I wouldn't compare those two if i were you. COmpletety different engine cylce you are talking about. That is from a rankine cycle.WhiteBlue wrote:
The target brake thermal efficiency of 45.7 % sounds pretty high but it is not an impossible target as other compounded power cycles have demonstrated. In electric power generation there are two stage gas/steam turbines used that reach 51% electric power efficiency. The comparable brake thermal efficiency is 52.6%. It would be interesting to look at the 1988 Honda turbo engine to compare what that delivered with limited boosting capability.
dren wrote:If using the MGUH load for the backpressure increase past 10.5, you could get an increase in recovery to the redline. This would put the MGUH load at some percentage at 10.5k rpm, increasing to 100% at around redline. The powerband would increase even without added fuel, and you would gain with improvements in bsfc. The energy storage in the battery could be used in the lower revs.
So maybe 7% recovery at 10.5k rpm, then around as high as 20% at 15k rpm. 695hp to 780hp
I say this because I don't know how else to vary the backpressure other than loading the MGUH.