Holm86 wrote:gold333 wrote:
Does anyone have approximate torque values he is talking about? It would be interesting to compare.
I remember that the 3.5L V8-V12 units had variable torque. The lowest torque figure I remember was the last Honda V12 on the 1992 McLaren MP4-7A (RA122E?) it made 297 lb/ft of torque, forgot the rpm, but it made 764hp @14400 on normal fuel and 805hp@14800 on the "special" fuels.
But torque wise thats the lowest I came across, the other engines were much higher.
If the engine has 600 hp at 10.500 rpm torque would be around 410 nm. So the engine torque is much higher than the V8's. But that torque will be offset by gearing because of the lower rpm. Though the torque curve will be much flatter meaning a high amount of torque is avalible at a broader rpm range. That is what will be tricky to manage when going on the throttle out of corners.
Now I'm confused. 410 nm is only 302lb/ft. Which is near enough identical to the last Honda V12 to race in F1, which had far less torque than an equivalent V10 or V8 at the time, e.g. Renault RS, Ford Zetec R, HBV8, etc.
By comparison I remember a Honda SAE paper on the 1986 V6 1.5L Turbo listing race hp at 994hp (742kW) @12400rpm and torque close to 700nm @9800rpm.
If in 2014 302lb/ft is considered high torque I wonder what the even lower values were that Jenson is referring to in his years gone by.
F1 car width now 2.0m (same as 1993-1997). Lets go crazy and bring the 2.2m cars back (<1992).