Were they really losing 15% power? The altitude only results in about 8% less air density.Jenson Button wrote:Normally we lose about 15% of power, we’re losing very little now
Were they really losing 15% power? The altitude only results in about 8% less air density.Jenson Button wrote:Normally we lose about 15% of power, we’re losing very little now
Using this calculator I'm getting up to 20% power loss, which is pretty accurate if we assume average loss is about 5% on "normal" circuits.hollus wrote:Were they really losing 15% power? The altitude only results in about 8% less air density.Jenson Button wrote:Normally we lose about 15% of power, we’re losing very little now
I think some teams have or had problems with the current 691kg limit. The 701kg just enables the heavy drivers to use more ballast weights to better balance the car. Or maybe Pirelli once again plans to make the tyres a bit heavier?WilliamsF1 wrote:Whats with the 10 kg addition? are they adding more batteries? I would have expected the second generation turbo cars to be 10 kgs lighter than the previous not more.Blanchimont wrote:Year kg 2013 642 2014 691 2015 701
fwiw the BBC man said yesterday that the NA engines lost 40 hp at InterlagosJuzh wrote:Using this calculator I'm getting up to 20% power loss, which is pretty accurate if we assume average loss is about 5% on "normal" circuits.hollus wrote:Were they really losing 15% power? The altitude only results in about 8% less air density.Jenson Button wrote:Normally we lose about 15% of power, we’re losing very little now
http://wahiduddin.net/calc/calc_hp_dp.htm
Altitude 785m
Air temp 25c
Altimeter Setting 928hpa - taken from F1 live timing
Dew point 20c - taken from this graph: graph img - humidity 67% at the time of race
On Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez NAs lost up to 35% of power.
You're right.hollus wrote: You are not supposed to enter 928hPa. If I use 1013hPa as the "Altimeter setting", a normal sea level pressure, I get the 928hPa at about 750m elevation, in accordance with FIA's reading of actual atmospheric pressure.
Changing the altitude and the pressure in the calculator is like going up 800m twice.
I won't even analyse this because I already spotted mistakes and it's pointless to compare when the numbers are wrong.hollus wrote:Blanchimont wrote:This table shows the overall lap record, the fastest time during the 2014 weekend and the differences in [s] and [%]. Australia, Malysia, China, Silverstone and Spa were wet qualifyings if i remember right.
Austral 1:23,529 1:29,375 5,846 7,00% Malays 1:33,074 1:39,008 5,934 6,38% Bahrain 1:30,139 1:33,185 3,046 3,38% China 1:32,238 1:38,315 6,077 6,59% Spain 1:19,995 1:25,232 5,237 6,55% Monaco 1:13,556 1:15,989 2,433 3,31% Canada 1:12,275 1:14,874 2,599 3,60% Austria 1:07,908 1:08,759 0,851 1,25% GreatBr 1:29,607 1:34,508 4,901 5,47% Germany 1:13,306 1:16,540 3,234 4,41% Hungary 1:18,773 1:22,715 3,942 5,00% Belgium 1:44,503 1:49,189 4,686 4,48% Italy 1:20,089 1:24,109 4,020 5,02% Singap 1:42,841 1:45,681 2,840 2,76% Japan 1:29,599 1:32,506 2,907 3,24%
Nope. Front tires of 2004 had 270mm of total width but grooves account for 56mm, so an effective 214mm width of contact versus current 250mm.Juzh wrote:Tires were much better in 2004. Also much wider, thus negating some of the contact patch deficit. I believe
Very good point. Interlagos' new asphault, alone, improved laptime by around 2s based on the times Porsche Cups were doing there in mid year and last weekend.GitanesBlondes wrote: You really cannot compare the 2004 times to the 2014 times because one of the biggest differences besides tires widths and tire manufacture methods, is unless you also know what the state of the tarmac at any circuit is today versus 2004, it's impossible to make even an educate guess as to the impact of surface friction on the times without knowing the abrasion level of any given circuit.
Endless variables out there, that cannot possibly be accounted for from car design, qualifying rules, tire compounds, tire dimensions, surface friction, and so on.
Turbo chargers combined with the fuel flow limit pretty much make altitude corrections moot.hollus wrote:Were they really losing 15% power? The altitude only results in about 8% less air density.Jenson Button wrote:Normally we lose about 15% of power, we’re losing very little now
I heard a lot of panic about drivers being too thin at the start of the year and how they'd all feint and die as soon as they went around a corner, but now I think everyone is on top of the weight or at least enough for it not to be a factor.Blanchimont wrote:I think some teams have or had problems with the current 691kg limit. The 701kg just enables the heavy drivers to use more ballast weights to better balance the car. Or maybe Pirelli once again plans to make the tyres a bit heavier?WilliamsF1 wrote:Whats with the 10 kg addition? are they adding more batteries? I would have expected the second generation turbo cars to be 10 kgs lighter than the previous not more.Blanchimont wrote:Year kg 2013 642 2014 691 2015 701
Sauber comes to my mind: http://www.planetf1.com/driver/10642/93 ... ose-weight
water vapour concentration (absolute humidity) tends to fall with altitudePlatinumZealot wrote:Turbo chargers combined with the fuel flow limit pretty much make altitude corrections moot.
The fuel flow limit is really the limiting factor in this years cars, not the boost pressure ratio. So what you will find is that the Turbo's will run a higher pressure ratio to make up for the lower atmospheric pressure. That gives the same horsepower as before only difference is, your turbo will end up spinning faster. Inter coolers will be slightly more inefficient too, but that is about it. I am assuming that oxygen is still 21% of the air though. I am not sure whether the oxygen concentration is higher or lower at those altitudes.
I'll bite and use those correction factors. I leave Brazil out for obvious reasons, and that leaves only Monza, Spa and Suzuka that were there 10 years ago, and I think they are largely unchanged.Blanchimont wrote:hollus, if you still want to correct the times for weight, Lotus provides some information on this since Spa.
Spa: 0,42 s/10kg
Monza: 0,30 s/10kg
Singapore: 0,33 s/10kg
Suzuka: 0,35 s/10kg
COTA: 0,37 s/10kg
Brazil: 0,29 s/10kg
from:
https://www.facebook.com/LotusF1Team/ph ... tos_stream
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lotus_f1team/
- Monza Spa Suzuka 2004 1:20:089 1:43:726 1:31:713 2008 1:21:997 1:43:338 1:29:590 2013 1:23:755 1:47:573 1:30:915 2014 1:24:109 1:49:189 1:32:506Corrected to 691kg:
- Monza Spa Suzuka 2004 1:22:679 1:47:548 1:34:898 2008 1:24:577 1:46:950 1:32:600 2013 1:25:225 1:49:715 1:32:630 2014 1:24:109 1:49:189 1:32:506Deficit to best:
- Monza Spa Suzuka 2004 0.00% 0.73% 2.59% 2008 2.30% 0.00% 0.01% 2013 3.07% 2.58% 0.01% 2014 1.72% 2.09% 0.00%Note: in the original post I forgot to count DRS in favor of the 2014 cars. It is of course also there in 2013 and 2012 (differently).