DaveW wrote:But I still have an issue with your original statement, because the measurement is actually an estimate of flow velocity, and corrected for fuel type, pressure & temperature. I guess RBR thought they had a better measure of mass flow and chose to ignore the FIA sensor (they had the right to do that, if the sensor was in error). The FIA proved that were not complete idiots by declaring their sensor was the standard, and everybody else was wrong. Incidentally, I believe that output of the device was digital, not analogue.
Sound travel trough various density fluids with various speed which is what I assume they use for measuring the density. If you have density and fluid velocity you get mass flow W = D^2 x rho x pi x v (bernouli equation). We use the speed of sound in my industry (offshore sesimic) to measure varied density in materials with sound.
toraabe wrote:Another thing is that you can have constant flow to the injectors, but the injectors can accumulate fuel so they can inject pulses up to 500 bar. Actually they have to accumulate fuel because they are delivering fuel in pulses. Not the common rail fuel pump in which is constantly delivering 100kg/h max.
Abarth wrote:I think there is a misunderstanding here.
There is no possible "cheating" wrt the fuel mass flow over a certain prolonged time, let's say over one lap (indeed, it would be even a shorter time...) with the idea Gruntguru proposed.
But, it is well possible to use the elasticity of the fuel transport system and/or the "elasticity of fuel in fluid vs. gaseous phase.
And, it has nothing to do with the rail pressure, i.e. the pressure the injectors are seeing, which is between 250 and max. 500 bar as far as info has been released.
All this must happen before the High Pressure Pump (HPP) which produces thede 250-500 bar and after a feeding pump. This pump could feed constantly 100kg/h, and be pressure limited to xx bar.
- In case of higher demand >100kg/h of the injectors/HPP, it would feed in the volume limited mode. The pressure in the fuel transport system falls, and elasticity/bubbles are produced. Mass flow sensor reads 100kg/h.
- When a certain low limit of the feeding pressure is reached, the engine has to reduce mass flow to 100kg/h.
- As soon as there is less than 100 kg/h used (braking, cornering), the feeding pump, still delivering 100 kg/h can repressure the system, until its pressure limit is reached, compressing the fuel bubble to liquid and/or expanding the fuel lines or whatever.
This can be made with very few electronic controls, one of the most important things being the fuel pump feeding constant volume independently from the pressure, but limiting this flow when a certain pressure level is reached.
I'm going to answer you two in compound.
Sure I get the proposed layout of the system, but creating such a low pressure on the suction side of the pump and getting the fuel to evaporate at a constant rate would be immensely difficult in my eyes. First you'd require some form of pressure/flow reducer valve to keep a constant flow before the HPP (from the low pressure supply pump and through the sensor), then you'd need to heat the fuel, then you'd need to make sure the gas bubble doesn't reach the HPP. Also it would be very difficult to control where the cavitation bubble would appear. This seems like such whichcraft to me that I highly doubt it. Less alone hiding all this stuff from the prying eyes of the FIA.
I actually assumed there was some kind of high pressure pump in the fuel system. I also assume there is a pressure regulating return valve like there is on diesel common rail fuel systems, but I could be wrong... I believe it is difficult to build pressure like that without a plunger type pump or gear pump and that would require a return valve that keeps the pressure steady.
Abarth wrote:I agree.
And mandating fuel pressure measurements on several points means nothing else that they have a strong suspect but no evidence that something is going on.
Why would they mandating it otherwise?
I'd agree there... I still can't see anything proposed so far that you would be able to hide though. The accumulator would be the one that make the most amount of sense but I still fail to see that one could hide it well enough.
Massive rally fan... have fallen out of love with F1 yet again and have thus migrated