bhall II wrote:I could be wrong here, but I tend to think the new sidepod profile signifies the adoption of Ferrari's "winged" cooling configuration. (Ignore the green boxes.)
Lucky-ish wrote:
If so, it allows the radiators to be oriented in a more horizontal position (better packaging), and it doesn't require much open bodywork at the rear of the car (better aero efficiency).
(I think) Red Bull did it last year...
...and retained it this year:
Not necessarily, indeed for the ICE it should be the other way around.bhall II wrote:[...] Power units have certain cooling requirements that are non-negotiable, and increasing their power output increases those requirements[...].
It depends on the combustion really. Increasing ICE power can result in either an increase or decrease in cooling requirements all depending on how the power increase is achieved.Abarth wrote:Not necessarily, indeed for the ICE it should be the other way around.bhall II wrote:[...] Power units have certain cooling requirements that are non-negotiable, and increasing their power output increases those requirements[...].
At full power, 100kg/h or 28g/s are the maximum that can be burnt, and I suppose any engine will be able to do so.
As this is a fuel limited formula, you need to convert as much energy of the (same) fuel amount into pressure, increasing mean effective pressure.
This also means that you have to try to avoid as much as possible that heat is transferred to cylinder walls, pistons and combustion chamber. As in other threads already mentioned, this is mainly done with excess air, very well managed injection spray and optimized turbulence inside the cylinder.
The higher the mechanical output power of the ICE, the lower the required cooling power.
The electrical machines are more dependant of the harvesting with MGU-H. Here, at constant ICE power, the lower the exhaust temperature (at same mass flow), the more power or better mean power (=energy) goes in MGU-H and therefore in ES and MGU-K.
The Engineering ToolBoxStoichiometric or Theoretical Combustion is the ideal combustion process where fuel is burned completely.
Good information!Aaronque wrote:Still down by 11kph
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CcTXk7rWoAAmYHp.jpg:large
I'm not sure there's an answer to this question that's correct all the time. So, I'll just say this: curved surfaces cause attached air flow to accelerate, which increases the stream's dynamic pressure. Since total pressure at any given location is constant, higher dynamic pressure means lower static pressure. If such a curved surface is facing up toward the heavens, lower static pressure equals lift.adrianjordan wrote:The MP4-31 seems to have an engine cover that stays horizontal at the top for longer than any of the other cars....that is to say it starts to slope down further rearwards....is there any aerodynamic significance to this?