Here is the Revmeter from Singapore
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lugburee8Pk[/youtube]
From me, that's the best I can do. RDS showed the pole lap on their studio screen, so that's the best quality available now. I'll seek for higher quality versionshollus wrote:Almost unreadable, unfortunately. Got that in higher resolution?
Gear Merc. Will. McLaren F.India T.Rosso R.Bull Lotus Marus. Ferrari Sauber Cater. 1 15.808 14.551 15.991 19.023 14.776 15.768 2 12.149 11.238 14.706 11.562 12.429 13.508 13.612 11.871 11.279 12.197 13.800 3 9.712 9.600 12.044 9.519 9.305 9.913 10.173 9.533 9.333 9.411 10.016 4 7.535 8.021 9.291 7.904 7.713 7.825 8.006 7.713 7.795 7.751 7.885 5 6.280 6.635 7.481 6.293 6.486 6.460 6.725 6.667 6.660 6.761 6.561 6 5.559 5.702 5.984 5.122 5.471 5.524 5.704 5.811 5.792 5.882 5.548 7 4.990 4.953 4.953 4.396 4.723 4.886 5.039 5.149 5.076 5.214 4.967 8 4.398 4.401 4.387 3.926 4.281 4.418 4.350 4.603 4.488 4.667 4.484
Hi Hollus,hollus wrote: ↑27 Mar 2014, 09:26It just tells you many small things.
Williams, McLaren and Red Bull are not counting on going over 350Km/h any time soon, because they can only do that in 8th by running well over 12000 RPM, and I haven't seen anybody happy to stay over 12000 for more than a split second, except Force India, which goes to 13000 in 4th and 5th gear. Force India chose very spaced middle gears, so they have to, and they'll have to for a few races. This also tells you that the Mercedes engine can routinely take 13000, but likely they are taking a hit in cooling or in efficiency to do that, and we'll see if in reliability also.
Williams with its impossibly compressed gears, shifts at the lowest revs, and in general if they choose to (and they seem to do so), they can run all the time between 10000 and 11500 RPM, as low as possible while using (almost) the full fuel allocation. Maybe this is also the reason for their bulletproof reliability. But they might be compromised out of Loews and in starts and pit stops, because 1st gear (which I haven't included yet) is left to deal with everything under 90Km/h all by itself. This 1st gear problem might also apply to Mercedes.
It just meant that you will depend 100% of clutch slip until you go over the speed equivalent to your idle RPM, and them by RPM until you shift to 2nd, which you will do near 90 km/h.90Km/h in first gear is a problem
hmmm, MS-Paint?could you turn your charts through 90 degrees
exposing my dunderheadedness, am i interpreting this right : 2000rpm drop ??gruntguru wrote: ↑09 Jun 2022, 01:17I calculated the rpm drop of each upshift eg 2nd - 3rd for Merc is 0.20 = 20% rpm drop. Also the average for all shifts from 2-3 to 7-8 for each team. The most interesting thing is teams with staggered gaps (not just the expected trend of smaller gaps in higher gears). Presumably this was done to get the "perfect" ratio for particular corner exits at multiple tracks.
https://i.imgur.com/cvfRiyb.png
Or you could rely on launch control to do it's job ? I don't know a lot about F1 but I assume they have some form of launch control ? but even if they don't, I have found that its much easier to control 2 things out of 3, ie wheel spin, throttle position or clutch slip, with too low a gear ratio and the torque of one of these engines then surely the wheel spin would be so much that all you do is stand still and burn rubber, with a higher gear ratio 1st gear the focus is on controlling the throttle position and then the wheel spin looks after itself but you do get acceleration, just my observations in my own car, which weighs about 500kg, has 450bhp/tonne and 62 mph at 7800 in 1st gear, with a HD clutch and cerametallic plate, the ceramic plate would normally act as a switch but as you increase the 1st gear ratio it lessons this phenomena and very quickly soon after launching the clutch is fully engaged with a chirp of wheel spin of course in the wet it's a little harder to drive.hollus wrote: ↑08 Jun 2022, 20:38It just meant that you will depend 100% of clutch slip until you go over the speed equivalent to your idle RPM, and them by RPM until you shift to 2nd, which you will do near 90 km/h.90Km/h in first gear is a problem
It is a lot of km/h where you have to be careful not to bog the engine down, to have the right slip and to control by throttle feathering, before you have the option to shift to 2nd.
Maybe it is not so much of a problem.
hmmm, MS-Paint?could you turn your charts through 90 degrees