Tommy Cookers wrote:the first 3 engines in the list were presumably run on fuel limited to the same Octane Number as road fuel the last is being run on fuel without limit of ON (unlike 1958-2013 F1) it would be less efficient if limited to road fuel ON (like 1958-2013 F1) as a reduced CR and/or boost would be necessary.
So it would be logical to assume significantly higher TE than the Prius.
and its efficiency can only be correctly represented by disregarding any power drawn from the store ES
stored energy is (mainly) energy that has already been counted as so-called 'sustainable power' output
(ie crankshaft power physically combined with whatever mu-k power is coming directly 'real-time' from gu-h power)
adding to this output power from stored energy is clearly double-counting and so is fraudulent
fraudulent as a statement of engine efficiency anyway
Exactly. Which is another reason that Mercedes claim of 40+% almost certainly does not include stored energy.
doesn't the Merc 40-43% efficiency mean 40% fairly accounted and 43% accounted by including stored energy?
It would be dishonest to include stored energy and use the word "efficiency".
If Toyota can release a road car (next gen Prius) with 40% efficiency on 91 RON, why is it so hard for folks to believe that Mercedes can be significantly higher than that given:
- The lack of financial constraint on engine construction
- The superior fuel available
- Turbocharging (worth 1 or 2% TE on the Prius lab engines)
- Compounding (worth 3 or 4% TE)
- Mercedes (Prof Webber) claim of 40+% was made in 2014. Current engines are clearly better.
There are very few minuses to balance the above list:
- Specific power is much higher
- RPM much higher
- Cylinder dimensions virtually spec.
Mind you, those 3 items didn't stop Honda RA168e achieving 32% TE despite:
- 30 year older technology
- PFI not DI
- No stratified charge
- No compounding
- Boost limit
- No lean burn - lambda was 0.98 (formula was "air flow limited" not "fuel flow limited")
My money says Mercedes are currently at approx 45%