Hello tommy. The turbo engine clutch has always on the engine side, looking on photos. I recon there is no need to have it in the gearbox anymore since these engine never really go above 13k rpm. Reading the article posted the 20k rpm NA v8 with those weird firing orders and flat plane cranks, there was a competitive advantage to putting the flywheel and clutch in box to remove as much undamped mass from the crank as possible.Tommy Cookers wrote:fwiw I assume the MGU-K is driven at the 'flywheel' end of the crank (and that torsionals are less there) ..... but as M says .....Mudflap wrote:As there is no flywheel per se, the inertia at the rear of the engine is low so displacements will not be as low as you think because the node of the first torsional mode shifts towards the front of the engine. Having said that, I am pretty sure Ferrari used a rear driven MGUK at some point. Honda's seemed to be front driven from a few pictures I have seen around here somewhere.gruntguru wrote: Surely the MGUK is driven at the flywheel/gearbox end of the crankshaft where the torsional displacements are much less severe?Nothing stopping them from sticking a damper on the MGUKgodlameroso wrote:Rules say it must be geared directly to the crank. It's not transmission side, but may be geared via a flywheel or something to that effect. .....
there is no flywheel - and what we loosely regard as equivalent to the flywheel is the clutch ....and .....
the clutch is in the gearbox ie effectively more remote from a traditional and textbook notion of 'flywheel' position
gearing the K at 3.5x crank speed might not be ideal in this regard
so things are less than clearcut
as others have said .....
crank stiffness is fixed at a conservative level by rules on minimum pin and main journal diameters ? (hollowing could evade this, but why do it ?)
block and head/cambox stiffness is vital (as Honda and Cosworth have found earlier)
honda_fun wrote:http://i.imgur.com/dpqsxR3.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/e9WT5xM.jpg
NHK(Japan Broadcasting Corporation) broadcasted on March 24 about Honda F1-PU
http://i.imgur.com/nvJXjkS.jpg
On the dyno test, at HRD Sukura,
When the number of the revs of their engine was 11552rpm, the revs of the MGU-H was 90168rpm.
and the boost pressure was 3.06bar. The exhaust gas temperature was 935degC.
http://i.imgur.com/QulbkID.jpg
At the upper left meter indicate the engine rev. the upper right meter indicate the engine torque.
Look at the torque of the engine, it was 451Nm(45.98kgf・m) when the engine rev was 11295rpm.
From calculation formula, Honda's ICE power is 46(kgf・m)×11295/716=726ps
I think that the ICE+MGU-K peakpower become 886HP when I assume the MGU-K 160ps.
You very well could be right, and in some ways I'm inclined to agree with you. I like your analogy of legs working on a pedal, because essentially you're right. Humans burn ATP, engines burn oxygen and some hydrogen, but the result is the same.PlatinumZealot wrote:I just have a feeling the vibrations are combustion related. Primary cause of engine vibration is combustion. Combustion is like a kick to a spinning wheel... Each kick rapidly accelerating the wheel mass while the stiffness, and damping (including friction) immediately slows it down back. With an irregular firing order the "kicks" are irregular and you have irregular vibrations. Thats for the crank, aux drives and engine structure...
For inside the combustion chamber you can have vibrations from poor combustion that affect the flame spread??? Think of a gas with sound waves in the cylinder acting as a sort of accordion creating sharp compression zones. Could have fringe knock happening? Sort of double tapping the piston?
I think the point is that the extension served as part of the flywheel.PlatinumZealot wrote:Hello tommy. The turbo engine clutch has always on the engine side, looking on photos. I recon there is no need to have it in the gearbox anymore since these engine never really go above 13k rpm. Reading the article posted the 20k rpm NA v8 with those weird firing orders and flat plane cranks, there was a competitive advantage to putting the flywheel and clutch in box to remove as much undamped mass from the crank as possible.Tommy Cookers wrote:fwiw I assume the MGU-K is driven at the 'flywheel' end of the crank (and that torsionals are less there) ..... but as M says .....Mudflap wrote:
As there is no flywheel per se, the inertia at the rear of the engine is low so displacements will not be as low as you think because the node of the first torsional mode shifts towards the front of the engine. Having said that, I am pretty sure Ferrari used a rear driven MGUK at some point. Honda's seemed to be front driven from a few pictures I have seen around here somewhere.
Nothing stopping them from sticking a damper on the MGUK
there is no flywheel - and what we loosely regard as equivalent to the flywheel is the clutch ....and .....
the clutch is in the gearbox ie effectively more remote from a traditional and textbook notion of 'flywheel' position
gearing the K at 3.5x crank speed might not be ideal in this regard
so things are less than clearcut
as others have said .....
crank stiffness is fixed at a conservative level by rules on minimum pin and main journal diameters ? (hollowing could evade this, but why do it ?)
block and head/cambox stiffness is vital (as Honda and Cosworth have found earlier)
"They are trying to build a competitive power unit, but they do not have a Formula One culture," Boullier said.
"They are a big, successful company and they have their own ways of doing things.
"To devise a power unit in Japan is a challenge.
"That is why Mercedes decided to make theirs in England.
"You need to be fast in developing, as fast as F1 moves.
"Process, procurement, both need to be looked at."
The two organisations are contracted to work together until 2024 although there are understood to be a number of break clauses, one coming at the end of the 2017 season.
Excessive valve temperatures are rumoured to be at the root of the new Honda’s problems. Whether this is inlet or exhaust valves we do not yet know but either way, such an engine would have to be run very far from its potential performance optimum in terms of ignition timing and fuel supply in order to keep the valve temperatures under control. That in turn would mean much less energy for the MGU-h to recover. And the slower end of straight speeds would mean less for the MGU-k to recover. The concept of the hybrids mean that problems are compounded just as gains are.
I see, but because of the fuel flow rules, there is no need to ...proteus wrote:RS200E wrote:bill shoe wrote:Yes!! I remember the volume and the nature of the Honda sound was very different from every other engine. It was a much sharper and louder noise. Why?? Were they using direct injection then and everyone else was not?
https://youtu.be/YPzlOhAWU_Q
If im not mistaken, the japanese engine manufacturers allways produced higher RPM engines, especially i noticed that in cars on the dashboard, the limiters red zone was defined much higher than in european manufacturers cars, right from the smallest cars up.
I think this sounds very reasonable. With all the dyno testing that they claim has been done, it is very unlikely the problems they are having are anything but forced vibration brought on by the motion of the car. The oil tank problem was a result of being unable to simulate/estimate the effects of motion on the ability of the pump to supply oil to the engine.luke352 wrote:Quite easy to see the vibrations being missed on a test bed. Although it has the same mounting points those mounting points are attached to very solid framework which is then probably secured into a concrete slab. All this would act to dampen the overall level of the vibrations. You then turn around and bolt the engine into a very light although stiff structure, this has a very poor ability to assist in dampening the vibrations. The result is the overall level of the vibrations are higher then what they probably saw on the dyno rig.Dimi wrote:I cant understand how vibrations affect electronic systems and why is so difficult for an automotive manufacturer to solve this.
- vibrations affect connectors?
- cause cold joints to cirquits?
- affect rotating parts of other electrical devices like altenators -mguh?
finally how is possible not to have discovered vibration problems on test beds?
So, mister Wazari with all the respect I have to you and for Honda I'd like to ask you a very simple and straightforward question, a question that I guess all the fans have and I suppose we all deserve an answer after all of these hard and painful years. With all of your honesty, do you think that we should still believe in this project ? I've been extremely positive and ambitious but after this testing I'm getting more and more disappointed and my high hopes get further and further killed. So, do you think that Honda will be able to sort this engine out and make it a proper P.U that can compete others ? Hasegawa told that he's "scared" of the power gap to others. This is an even bigger disappointment since it eliminates all of our hopes and prospects for the future. It gives us the feeling that even after Honda sorts all of the problems, this P.U will still be by bar the weakest and not competitive. So what's your view on the above? Do we still have something to expect? Or a year worse than 2016 and close to 2015 again? I really hope Honda can find their path otherwise this year's opportunities will get scraped.Wazari wrote:It amazes me how much effort people take to try and discredit or put down other people on the Internet. To actually email the HR department at Sakura to figure out who I am, to that person, you need to find another hobby. So to all of those who think I’m a fraud or fake, just believe that I’m the head janitor at Sakura and my nephew is a part-time musubi-maker in the cafeteria. You might as well also stop reading here......