Could you please recap why having a longer pipe from one bank is advantageous??? I've wondered why Mercedes has chosen a single entry turbine.Tommy Cookers wrote:for months I have been predicting that one bank will have a longer exhaust pipe than the other (and feel vindicated in this ?)
but I can't see what the crankshaft looks like, please can someone with better eyes and brain and IT competence help out here ?
The unequal length headers will work over a small range of rpm - which is probably ok for F1.Tommy Cookers wrote:the 90 deg 'true' V6 (ie 3 crank throws, side-by-side rods) will not deliver equi-spaced pulses to a single turbo
(120 deg V angle would be needed for that)
if one of our 90 deg banks has suitably more downpipe length than the other bank has, the pulses will arrive quite equally spaced
over a limited rpm range anyway
any inequality of spacing causes some interference and loss of pulse energy IMO
assuming that a double entry turbo is not the complete answer to unequal spacing (some interference will occur in the turbo ?)
the single turbo F1 Renault in the 70s also had a clear difference in the pipe lengths, presumably (to me) for this reason
cross-plane cranks did not have a pulse interference problem as long as 'crossover headers' were usedwuzak wrote: ....... The advantage is there is no interference between exhaust pulse.
This is also why the V8s had flat plane cranks.
I'd assume that at once you reach a certain RPM range the flat-plane has a power advantage because the exhaust cross over needed for a cross plane would make the headers too longTommy Cookers wrote:cross-plane cranks did not have a pulse interference problem as long as 'crossover headers' were usedwuzak wrote: ....... The advantage is there is no interference between exhaust pulse.
This is also why the V8s had flat plane cranks.
impossible in front engined cars so eg the Lancia D50 had interference, Ferrari brought to that car an 8-8 system to avoid this
but was no great problem in 61/2 F1 to Coventry-Climax or with Detroit or Indy V8s in rear engined cars
single plane ('flat') cranks were introduced by C-C as lighter, cheaper and allowing more compact and simpler exhaust systems
no-one claimed increased power AFAIK
these were customer engines produced on a commercial basis
the total spend in F1 was then maybe about 5% of the modern level
Ferrari may also have the MGU-H in the vee. They certainly haven't "lost the battle".ringo wrote:I feel renault has lost the battle with their MGUH between the banks.
They are limited by MGUH diameter and hence torque when it's placed over the engine. I also notice that the mercedes has nice straight run of stable air going directly to the compressor. The Renault has some funky inlet design.
I would be very pleased if i could see these engines in the flesh instead of these artist renderings.
Press the space bar to freeze the video. At 2m12s to 2m13s is the crankshaft. It is weird. 3 throw but each throw has two bigends about 90° apart. I know Honda use something similar on the V4 VFR engines but the spacing between the 2 cranks is just 28° and it is clear how the crankpin is machined to give that. On this cgi it is not clear but there seems to be a bit of a web between the 2 journals.Tommy Cookers wrote:for months I have been predicting that one bank will have a longer exhaust pipe than the other (and feel vindicated in this ?)
but I can't see what the crankshaft looks like, please can someone with better eyes and brain and IT competence help out here ?
Great find! That would explain different sound of the Mercedes engine. I suspected that Mercedes doesn't use straight shared crankpins for both banks but there's an offset however I thought the offset would be small like in the VR6 engines.tok-tokkie wrote:Press the space bar to freeze the video. At 1m12s to 2m13s is the crankshaft. It is weird. 3 throw but each throw has two bigends about 90° apart. I know Honda use something similar on the V4 VFR engines but the spacing between the 2 cranks is just 28° and it is clear how the crankpin is machined to give that. On this cgi it is not clear but there seems to be a bit of a web between the 2 journals.