But Turns 5,6,7 11&12 are all fast enough, so its not true to say Bahrain has no high speed turns.
Turn 7 is around the 220kph mark which is on par with Becketts and faster than Stowe.
The Prius uses a planetary gear set with multiple inputs/outputs, it does not compare to sticking a big starter motor/generator on the nose of the crank as in F1,NTS wrote:The MGU-K is basically a very powerful starter motor. You just cut injection for all cylinders at the start of the pitlane and restart them a few meters before the end-pit-limiter line. Since the crankshaft is turning at that point (by power from the MGU-K) the restarting is nothing more than starting injection and ignition. This has been done by Toyota in the Prius since 2004 and many hybrids after that.Maxion wrote:Since the F1 cars do not contain a starter motor they won't be running only on the MGU-K. Cylinder shutdown is AFAIK allowed in 2014 so theoretically they should be able to turn off a few cylinders and run predominantly with the MGU-K.
Making judgments about downforce based purely on appearances is a bad idea at the best of times. How can you say which nose has a better impact on the car's overall downforce? And as for judging a car's downforce on the tightness of the coke bottle, remember the Williams from a couple of years ago? The car was virtually non-existent behind the sidepods, but it was still a dog on track.Artur Craft wrote:I doubt Mercedes would have as much downforce as Mclaren. Brackley's car have a tighter coke-bottle than Mclaren but not that much more, and their nose probably doesn't help it either. Then, the Mclaren has a very significant advantage with their lower wishbones...
I very much doubt that. Clear signs came from the laptimes, where mercedes was 1.5s faster than mclaren's best while being on a one step inferior tyre. Testing times do start getting relevant now, especially for those 2, being the 2 most reliable teams. Mercedes overall just looks faster.Artur Craft wrote: That all said, I doubt Mercedes would have as much downforce as Mclaren. Brackley's car have a tighter coke-bottle than Mclaren but not that much more, and their nose probably doesn't help it either. Then, the Mclaren has a very significant advantage with their lower wishbones...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_ggwTnqhqkNathanOlder wrote:But Turns 5,6,7 11&12 are all fast enough, so its not true to say Bahrain has no high speed turns.
Turn 7 is around the 220kph mark which is on par with Becketts and faster than Stowe.
Really cool thanks for finding and posting this man.vtr wrote:Have you guys seen the Caterham telemetry data they have in their (really good) site?
Here's the one for Bahrain http://caterhamf1.com/previews/2013/04- ... H-Full.png
Yes, it's the Caterham, not a top car, and we don't know the conditions of the car when the data was acquired, but the telemetry they provide can provide a nice reference.
We can see that turn 2 is a very strong corner g-wise as Blanchimont said, the telemetry car did turn 6 at 167km/h and 7 at 192 km/h. Turn 9 has very high lateral g as well before the car brakes. Turn 12 is the one with the most lateral g, taken at around 250km/h flat out.
I aslo feel Mercedes could be slightly faster at present however According to Sky http://www1.skysports.com/f1/news/22058 ... at-bahrain, Jenson also did a 1:34.9 on new softs on the last day too.turbof1 wrote:I very much doubt that. Clear signs came from the laptimes, where mercedes was 1.5s faster than mclaren's best while being on a one step inferior tyre. Testing times do start getting relevant now, especially for those 2, being the 2 most reliable teams. Mercedes overall just looks faster.Artur Craft wrote: That all said, I doubt Mercedes would have as much downforce as Mclaren. Brackley's car have a tighter coke-bottle than Mclaren but not that much more, and their nose probably doesn't help it either. Then, the Mclaren has a very significant advantage with their lower wishbones...
I think mercedes get to extract more performance from the diffuser, since they have the confidence to run the amount of rake that matches pre-2014 ones.
I still think people make too much of starting and stopping an ICE. With proper computer control you can run with zero injection from limiter to stop. Then start injection at the exact same time as taking off from the stop and cut injection immediately if you reach the limiter speed. Starting and stopping and ICE while you have some other source of power on the crankshaft (MGU-K, but also for your standard car: motion from the wheels) is not really technically different from cylinder cutting, just applied to all cylinders.Crabbia wrote:Although thinking about that I'm sure the teams would still want good acceleration off the line from stationary after the pit stop itself, and the MGUK by itself would give a sluggish pull off in comparison to the ICE + MGUK. So if anything i think they would run on MGUK from the pitlane limiter line to the stop, at the stop restart the ICE and then pull off with the ICE.
Considering this i think they would most likely run on predominantly MGUK at maxion mentioned with possibly the ICE having 2 cylinders shut down.
Blanchimont wrote:Don't underestimate the corner 2 at 160km/h from the Rosberg video, i think it is very close to the lateral limit of the car.
Then 6 at 185km/h and 7 at 215km/h, braking for corner 10 through 9 from 250km/h. Corner 12 with a speed of 250 seems also close the lateral limit to me.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c ... ut.svg.png