I'd takes that as meaning you cannot retard ignition to fire out of the exhaust, I nut sure it means you cannot skip ignitions as long as you still produce torque per the map.ebare wrote:As for the paddles, the answer is 'no'. Tech regulations state: "5.5.1 The only means by which the driver may control the engine torque is via a single chassis mounted foot (accelerator) pedal."ringo wrote: It's kind of a traction control if you think about it, just that it's not a feedback system, maybe vettel manually cuts out the cylinders some how which limits his torque to the wheels, but has that high speed air to blow the rear. Probably just squeezes a paddle, cuts out 4 cylinders, releases paddle to bring back 8 cylinders when car is up to speed and about to leave the corner.
I'm also not an engineer but i think that sequencial fire up of the cilinders is useless because of Article 5.5.5 "At any given engine speed the driver torque demand map must be monotonically increasing for an increase in accelerator pedal position." And forbidden by Article 5.6.6 "Except when anti-stall or idle speed control are active, ignition base offsets may only be applied above 80% throttle and 15,000rpm and for the sole purpose of reducing cylinder pressure for reliability."Jackles-UK wrote: Imagine if you will: When the throttle is pressed 50% of its travel (mid-corner for example) it opens up 4 of the cylinders, at 75% (corner exit/traction zones) 6 come in and at full throttle on straights the full 8 fire up. Technically it would be fully driver operated and be pretty intuitive allowing the drivers to just have at it rather than second guessing the ignition cycle of the engine! They would need to retard the ignition a bit with a trick engine map but if they make it fire when no cylinders were on back in 2011 I'm sure they can reverse the trick.
if they want to load the engine effectively producing less torque and more exhaust, I don't see why they couldn't use something similar to the magic pedal Mclaren had in 98, but it would be easy to see if the rear brakes were glowing
on the exit of corners