Is there anything to show the engines would be instantly more powerful without E85? As i understand it E85 is very very knock resistant?Juzh wrote:This is a post from F1f on the proposed 2.2 V6
If all of the above is true, these 2.2l could prove quite competitive. Especially if there's an additional simple KERS system added as has been talked about. There's still a question of fuel ofcourse as there's noway they can make it race distance on 100 kg.For those who don’t know, Mark Gallagher is referring to Chevy and Honda Performance Development. Twin turbo, 2.2L V6 engines is the IndyCar spec. I’m sure Chevy and HPD would love to sell engines to some F1 teams, since it is widely believed they lose money on the cost capped, engine leases to IndyCar teams.
They never release official figures, but the most common reported numbers are that the engines make between 750 to 850 hp, depending on whether they are set up for a road/street course versus a super speedway. I’m pretty confident that the engines could easily make over 900 hp. There isn’t a maximum number of engines that a driver is allowed to use each season, but there is a minimum distance that an engine must be run before it can be replaced without a penalty. I believe that number was 2,500 miles for the 2015 season. My rough math is that would equate to eight or nine F1 race weekends, so it should be possible to tune them for higher performance and still last 4 or 5 races. Also, Indycar uses E85 (ethanol) fuel, and the engines would instantly generate more power running on gasoline/petrol.
Like I said before I’m sure Chevy/Ilmor would sell their engines. I bet HPD would too, but I don’t know if Honda Japan would allow it. Supposedly Cosworth also has an Indycar V6 engine design, but could never get a manufacturer to fund the testing and production of it.
Ethanol has about 3% more energy than gasoline relative to the stoichiometric mass (or quantity burnable in a given engine)NL_Fer wrote:E85 will make a turbo engine much more powerfull than gasoline. Just consumes much more of it, since ethanol contains less energy per liter.
Ethanol (and methanol also) has an oxygen component in it's molecule, so it needs less air to combust. For the same engine, this means you can inject more ethanol than gasoline. Also with ethanols better cooling capability and highe octane rating, you can generate allot more energy with E85 in the same engine.Tommy Cookers wrote:Ethanol has about 3% more energy than gasoline relative to the stoichiometric mass (or quantity burnable in a given engine)NL_Fer wrote:E85 will make a turbo engine much more powerfull than gasoline. Just consumes much more of it, since ethanol contains less energy per liter.
so is maybe no better than current or N/A F1 'gasoline'
but Methanol similarly has about 10% more energy than gasoline
Except that all the manufacturers, yes including Ferrari and Mercedes, agreed last week to capping the costs of the current PU even going so far as to propose a tier 1 (latest spec) and tier 2 (b-spec) system to help reduce costs to smaller teams...Phil wrote:Another key factor in this alternative engines being proposed is also the unwillingness of both Mercedes and Ferrari (perhaps also Honda) to cap the price for engines to something affordable for smaller teams.
Like bernie said...they invested that money for road car relevance right? How is it unfair when it was intended to benefit the road car divisions?Andres125sx wrote:To me the only way those 2.2 V6 would make any sense is if the rules are written for those to be second class engines. Otherwise if I´d be Renault, Ferrari, Mercedes or Honda, I´d be really upset.
If the new 2.2 are intended to compete with current PU´s that´d be too unfair for current manufacturers. They invested a huge amount of money, if now any team can get an engine equally competitive with just third of the cost that´d be amazingly unfair.
Obviously Mercedes, Ferrari and even Honda will never accept this, they´ll accept it only if sure those 2.2 engines will not compete with current PUs
Upset or not, if the consequence of each engine-manufacturer and competitor looking out for its own interest leads to teams ending without an engine and customer teams being handicapped even more than the benefit a works-team already has and enoys... the means of the sport (in this context Bernie and the FIA) to come up with solutions to level the game seems rather logical to me.Andres125sx wrote:To me the only way those 2.2 V6 would make any sense is if the rules are written for those to be second class engines. Otherwise if I´d be Renault, Ferrari, Mercedes or Honda, I´d be really upset.
Really? Do you have any link? From what I heard, precisely that point is in doubt - I quote from James Allen:Adrianjordan wrote:Except that all the manufacturers, yes including Ferrari and Mercedes, agreed last week to capping the costs of the current PU even going so far as to propose a tier 1 (latest spec) and tier 2 (b-spec) system to help reduce costs to smaller teams...
sgth0mas wrote: Like bernie said...they invested that money for road car relevance right? How is it unfair when it was intended to benefit the road car divisions?
Which team will end up without an engine and why? Every team that requires and engine, has an engine. Apart from Red Bull who jettisoned their engine with no regard for where they would get their next one.Phil wrote:Upset or not, if the consequence of each engine-manufacturer and competitor looking out for its own interest leads to teams ending without an engine and customer teams being handicapped even more than the benefit a works-team already has and enoys... =Andres125sx wrote:To me the only way those 2.2 V6 would make any sense is if the rules are written for those to be second class engines. Otherwise if I´d be Renault, Ferrari, Mercedes or Honda, I´d be really upset.