Abarth wrote:Andres125sx wrote:[[...]So a four stroke turbo engine provided more than 900bhp/litre 3 decades ago.
...for about 10 laps or so.
So you do think that such peak figures could increase about 40%, from 900 HP /Litre to 1250 HP /l?
In which fields do we need the improvement, and where can we possibly find such huge increases?
Can we find the additional increase in
BMEP and/or revs without blowing the engine after 10 seconds?
No doubt. Between 1980 and 2005 NA outputs rose from 180 bhp/l to 310 bhp/l. That is a 72% increase in 25 years.
So for the 30 years you are talking about, a specific power increase of at least 72% would be possible - without increasing boost. IMO if we went back to the original 1.5 litre turbo formula (no boost limit, no rpm limit and no limit on the number of cylinders) 1500 bhp/l would be possible. (2,400 bhp from a 1.6l)
If you don't believe me, think of the following scenario. Take a 2103 V8 (750 bhp in spite of the rpm limit and prescribed cylinder size). Use 5 of those cylinders to build a 470 hp 1.5l NA engine. Turbocharge to 6 bars - bingo - 2,500+ bhp.