Honestly, it would be easier to supply each car with FIA desired volume of 100kg. Each supplier would provide the fuel and the FIA would be responsible for the process.
is just an idea.
The fuel sensor is not calibrated during the racehardingfv32 wrote: No it is not.... Fuel rate measured using injector data vs a FIA flow meter that must be re-calibrated during the race. Any doubt about which is more accurate?
Brian
TD in question copied from: http://www.racecar-engineering.com/news ... uel-rules/LionKing wrote:Technical Regulations copied from previous posts:
5.1.4 Fuel mass flow must not exceed 100kg/h.
5.10.3 Homologated sensors must be fitted which directly measure the pressure, the temperature and the flow of the fuel supplied to the injectors, these signals must be supplied to the FIA data logger.
5.10.4 Only one homologated FIA fuel flow sensor may be fitted to the car which must be placed wholly within the fuel tank.
Why people keep saying RBR did not use FIA supplied fuel meter? That part I don't understand.
As far as I know they did use it. It was in the car and obviously sending the values out. So RBR is compliant with 5.10.3 and 5.10.4.
The only issue is whether they adhere to 5.1.4 regulating the mass flow or not? If they can prove that they should win the appeal.
I have to agree with Tim here. Here's why.Tim.Wright wrote:I think I'm going to stop pushing the point because its going nowhere.
But Ral, what you have posted just confirms what I have been saying. The teams need to abide by the code, the sporting regs and the technical regs. This just tells me that the technical directives (which RB violated) are NOT the binding power here, the regs are.
The TD is not just another heading, its a completely seperate document that doesn't (as I understand) have any legislative power.
+10000000000000GrandAxe wrote:Its a story of being too smart for ones boots. It could have gone like this:
RB: Sensor is faulty.
FIA checks it out: No, it isn't.
RB: Its faulty!
FIA: Use the FP one then.
RB: No, we like the faulty one better.
FIA (scratches head): Really? Suit yourselves.
RB susses the FIA sensor representative is NOT smart as a button and invents new fuel flow model.
RB to RB engineer: Use the backup.
RB engineer: But it says on the tin to ask the FIA FIRST.
RB: Just you the damn backup or prepare for gardening in Siberia!
Smart as a button FIA sensor representative immediately spots RB's trick.
FIA: Use this correction factor to bring your fuel rate back in line.
RB: The sensor is faulty.
FIA: The sensor is faulty? Didn't we hear that one before? Use the correction factor now.
RB: Our fuel rate is just fine, you can't tell us how to measure fuel rates.
FIA: Enh?!
RB: Yes, our fuel flow model is better than yours.
FIA: What?!
Bang! Disqualification, FIA pulls the trigger.
Again – read the FIA's document. Your assertion that it is ultrasonic is in direct conflict with the contents of the specification.djos wrote:The FFM uses an ultrasonic measuring device, this is in no way the same as calculating the fuel flow using pump pressure and injector open times!beelsebob wrote:I'm not nit picking. This is an important distinction. You guys claimed that there were no "flow meters" in the engine injectors because they're simply measuring time open, pressure etc, and then computing flow from that. Similarly, the FIA official flow meter is simply measuring velocity, temperature etc, and then computing flow from that. The two are doing the exact same job, in the exact same way. There is no reason to believe that the injectors do it more accurately than the FIA's sensor.jz11 wrote:why are you nit-picking? no one is concerned as to what happens inside the thing - the output is the mass flow, therefore you can ignore the detailed specifics and just say - it measures mass flow
Ultrasonic measurement is a last resort, it's horribly low res and why ultrasonic tape measures went the way of the dodo as soon and laser tape measures became affordable!
You only use ultrasonic measuring when you have no other choice.
That would not measure what's required. Ricciardo was not disqualified for going over the 100kg limit. He was disqualified for going over the 100kg/h limit.idfx wrote:Honestly, it would be easier to supply each car with FIA desired volume of 100kg. Each supplier would provide the fuel and the FIA would be responsible for the process.
is just an idea.
They arent agruing that "The sensor is fine".djos wrote:Yep, sensor is fine, no one else thinks it's innacurate ....
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/112973
Got it, sorry for the previous comment. My logic was this:beelsebob wrote:That would not measure what's required. Ricciardo was not disqualified for going over the 100kg limit. He was disqualified for going over the 100kg/h limit.idfx wrote:Honestly, it would be easier to supply each car with FIA desired volume of 100kg. Each supplier would provide the fuel and the FIA would be responsible for the process.
is just an idea.
I don't think this is true. The sensors are calibrated (by the manufacturer of other authority) to give equal readings within a defined tolerance.This sensor is calibrated for each car.