Transient situations, so has it been explained, unfortunately I do not recall who it was, but this Person had some insight. Maybe I find the link...toraabe wrote:Why dump the electricity from the MGU-H into a resistor instead of powering the MGU-K.
Here the link:Re the H to K transfer.
There are times when you can't (or wouldn't want to) transfer power from the H to the K but still need to limit turbo speed.
Think along the lines of a short burst of accel then slight decel then accel (such as feathering throttle for traction or in a switch back). The last thing the driver would want is for the K to feed power into driveline.
During those transitional situations Renault wanted to control the speed of the turbo by using the H to maintain shaft speed at or close to max rpm. It turned out (partly because of the driveability issues) that H was dumping to the heatsink far more than had been predicted or modeled. This was causing severe heat related issues in some cars at Jerez and the Renault 'patch' was to disable the H entirely and rely on the mechanical wastegate for the remainder of the test.
Obviously this resulted in dramatically increased lag and reduced performance but allowed some mileage to be put on the ICE.
In the interests of transparency it should be disclsclosed that we have had no first hand experience with the original spec PU used in Jerez.
Our running experience started with a version that had basic H functioning and limited K output.
http://www.auto123.com/en/racing-news/f ... tid=176231No quick fix for Renault piston fault
Cyril Abiteboul is quoted as saying there can be "no solution within the next six weeks".
I agree 100%!toraabe wrote:Why dump the electricity from the MGU-H into a resistor instead of powering the MGU-K.
Please read my post 3 posts above yours....and in why Renault wanted to use a resistor. And why it didn't work out.Wayne DR wrote:I agree 100%!toraabe wrote:Why dump the electricity from the MGU-H into a resistor instead of powering the MGU-K.
The charging capability from the MGUH in the Technical Regulations is unlimited, so unless the battery is full, I don't see why you would be powering a resistor to waste electrical power. Open the waste gate, and dump some pressure, rather than heating up inside the car!
The Technical Regulations limit harvesting from the MGUK to 2MJ/lap, and allow 4MJ/lap discharge to the MGUK. The 2MJ plus shortfall per lap should be made up by the MGUH (EVERY LAP), so the Energy Store is always as full as possible.
Also at 4MJ/lap and 120kW as prescribed in the Technical Regulations, the theoretical duration of the electrical boost is limited to 30 odd seconds. This is in excess of the constant (unlimited) power that can be supplied from the MGUH to the MGUK (60-80kW peak estimated under a Brayton Cycle model at 3.4 Bar - Sustainable operating mode). So Renault are theoretically missing out on as much as 60 and 90 seconds of full MGUK boost (120kW) per lap...
I think they need to ditch the resistor and rethink their MGU Controller and waste gate operating strategies.
I thought the battery pack had a minimum weight of 25kg to prevent a battery arms race. Could be wrong.WilliamsF1 wrote:That could mean that Renault are not using a 4 MJ battery Pack
The maximum size of the battery back is given by the FIA as 25 KG, which they estimated as 4MJ
Renault probably running a smaller pack or MGU-H undersized to use at all times and unable to keep turbo below the 125,000 rpm limit
Minimum 20kg, maximum 25kg.bonjon1979 wrote:I thought the battery pack had a minimum weight of 25kg to prevent a battery arms race. Could be wrong.WilliamsF1 wrote:That could mean that Renault are not using a 4 MJ battery Pack
The maximum size of the battery back is given by the FIA as 25 KG, which they estimated as 4MJ
Renault probably running a smaller pack or MGU-H undersized to use at all times and unable to keep turbo below the 125,000 rpm limit