danwilkie90 wrote:I remember Martin Brundle saying in an interview a while ago that going into some corners some teams may turn the engine off and then rely purely on the torque of the electric engine for acceleration out the other side.
Might this be what Ferrari are doing?
Unlikely. Not enough HP (160). This would only work in very slow corners and only very briefly at the exit (<1s per corner). Probably not worth the trouble.
Going from 100 km/h to 150km/h at traction limit will take roughly 1s (assuming 1,5g at the exit of a tight turn).
Kinetic energy difference will be 340kJ or 340kWs (@700kg). This means with a traction limit of 1,5g (accelerating onto a straight) you could use 340kW.
Even with a traction limit of 1g (accelerating while still in exit of the turn) this would still be ~225kW (rather than the 115 available).
Now count the number of turns where the cars are that slow and you will find that the amount of fuel to be saved would be completely negligeable. Using it for traction control will instead of the IC engine will only work below 100 km/h, since above that you would loose accelration compared to what would be possible.