Facts Only wrote:Sorry to burst a few bubbles here but Mercedes HPP write all the engine map software for the engines, their engineers trackside control and record what map is being used at all times. It has to be that tightly controlled to allow the engines to run for 5 race weekends. With each map they know exactly how much life is being taken out of the engine per kilometer, running in overtake mode with the highest cylinder pressure would kill the engine in a couple of hundred kilometers, every bit of running is put into the damage matrix so they can have a strategy of when to use each engine.
Thats not to say that the teams cant come up with there own usage strategy and HPP will support them with their plans but at they end of the day they are leased from HPP who are fully in control and they have written all the software.
It also doesnt mean that teams dont have different maps but this will only extend to a set of works egine maps and a set of customer maps that are probably a few iterations behind used for everyone else.
The customer teams dont even have access to the HPP dyno's to write any software of their own and the engines go back to Brixworth between races so they cant be run anywhere else.
The differences between PU's are a lot less than 5hp, more like 0.5hp, the engines are earmarked for a car as they are being built and noit selected based on perfromance.
Mercedes probably have different teams working on engine optimization for its different customers. That's how it worked when McLaren was a customer, and only a few people actually knew the relative performance of the engines going to McLaren and the engines going to Mercedes.
As for the power difference between engines, remember that the accuracy high performance dynamometers like AVL's DynoExact is only +-0.1% of full scale. So if the dyno maximum rated torque is 700 Nm it can only give an accuracy of +-0.7 Nm, or 1.2 hp at 12,000 rpm.
R_Redding wrote:Vortex37 wrote:Re: Traction control.
The MGU-K is almost certainly a switched reluctance motor
They are almost certainly not..
It takes 6 cables to drive a SRM in an asymmetric bridge converter , each winding being individually driven and seperate... in neither star or delta.
As every photo so far shows MGUKs an Hs being driven by 3 wires , they will be high performance BLDC motors driven in star or delta (Star is usual) by a three leg H bridge. This configuration also has a big advantage when the MGUK-H is generating as the switching modules will provide the synchronous rectification needed.
Rob
KERS motors were permanent magnet synchronous motors (PMSM), MGU-K is most likely of the same type. Since this is a three phase AC motor it has 3 wires.
Bosch Motorsport did offer a KERS system with a BLDC motor though, as a low cost option. That motor was something like twice the weight of their PMSM offering.
PMSM are a popular choice for production cars too, and they are often found in electric and hybrid vehicles; Chevrolet Volt, BMW i3, Mitsubishi iMIEV, Toyota Prius to mention a few. These usually operate at much lower speeds than your would find in F1, and use cheaper silicon-iron in the stator rather than the cobalt-iron alloys I suspect you find in F1.