I don't think there will be any lean running under normal race situations.
It's a waste of air and energy to run the compressor. Lean running directly affects flame temperatures and pressures.
I'm just thinking they run that turbo at full boost as much as possible just turning down fuel, leaning out for power reduction via driver throttle input lift. Inf act they might even go as far as cylinder deactivation on minimal input. I would not know if they run lean for maximum power but we can safely assume all Formula One engine manufacturers have the capacity to tune air fuel ratio for optimization in an engine test room that would deem shocking for them to have miss something. If mercedes-Benz are running lean for full power, what are the chances the other manufacturers engineers to missing this??gruntguru wrote:If running lean improves efficiency (power produced/fuel flow rate) they will run lean for maximum power. If power becomes less important, they may choose to reduce the "fuel flow rate" but they will still run the engine at whatever is the most efficient AFR.Powerslide wrote:. . . . probably it comes down to setting where Mercedes-Benz will run optimum air fuel ratio when needed for that flier then run lean on parts of the circuit where power is less important. . . . .
There is a difference between "lean" and "less fuel".
Perhaps a detail, but the above is a contradiction, if the turbo pressure was 2.5 bar absolute, it means 1.5 bar boost.gruntguru wrote: ...
- 2.5 bar abs boost
...
Did you really write that last question? Do you not understand the compression/temperature benefits of high pressure GDI with a very late injection? Surely, if you're talking stratified charges you should already understand these benefits.gruntguru wrote:Agreed. It is undoubtedly a fine balancing act and it will be interesting when the details of what they have achieved can be revealed.
It pays to remember what Honda achieved in 1988. 26 years ago:
- 2.5 bar abs boost
- 9.4:1 CR
- 70*C charge temperature
- Lambda ratio 0.98 at full power and 12,000 rpm
- 32.2% thermal efficiency (Mercedes claims over 40% in 2014)
and remember this was an "airflow limited" engine with race fuel consumption restrictions. Todays engines are "fuel flow limited" which creates a direct relationship between power and efficiency which did not exist in 1988. Remember also the Honda engine did not have DI. If the DI system is unable to produce significant charge stratification at 10,500 rpm what is the benefit of having it?
Not enough information. Needs to be 2.5 bar absolute "something" e.g. "intake pressure".xpensive wrote:2.5 bar absolute will do just fine.
My understanding is the same, a Stratified Charge can only be used under light and moderate loading and not at high RPMs. A Homogeneous Charge (either stoichiometric or slightly rich) is needed at WOT for maximum power generation.Pierce89 wrote:Did you really write that last question? Do you not understand the compression/temperature benefits of high pressure GDI with a very late injection? Surely, if you're talking stratified charges you should already understand these benefits.
Besides, you don't have to have "significant" stratification to run slightly richer around the plug tip. The "fully stratified" systems with no fuel at all close to the cylinder walls effectively reduce your volumetric efficiency in exchange for the increase in thermal efficiency. In other words, you've got a smaller less powerful but very efficient engine. That's why its not done in WOT situations. It reduces overall power and the extra boost requirement would reduce rcoverable power at the turbine too.