Quali modesiskue2005 wrote: ↑26 Aug 2017, 16:04how much advantage is this oil burning? is it only useful in qualy or more useful in the race?
Getting bigger Baaaang for shorter time
Quali modesiskue2005 wrote: ↑26 Aug 2017, 16:04how much advantage is this oil burning? is it only useful in qualy or more useful in the race?
I shared this particular image with my FB today, because while I got a computer engineering degree thanks to a scholarship, I was and always be a mech/aero engineer at heart. I was on the chassis/suspension team for our uni's Formula SAE team. The manhours required to sculpt these elements is completely lost on the layman, but my engineer friends understand the CFD investment.Morteza wrote: ↑24 Aug 2017, 15:10Some nice shots of the details on W08:
https://imgr3.auto-motor-und-sport.de/M ... 113157.jpg
Via AMuS
What do you think the AI would be iterating towards? If the end goal is aerodynamic performance, what measure might it use if it can't use CFD? Or is the AI given the surfaces but iterates to some other goal such as weight or stiffness?
Both.. see Hamilton's post safety car run.. & the advantages are manifold.. with various potentials such as..siskue2005 wrote: ↑26 Aug 2017, 16:04how much advantage is this oil burning? is it only useful in qualy or more useful in the race?
but the rule only take effect from next week onwards, which means that Vettel also had engine which can burn that much oil. So ur point is not valid.J.A.W. wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 03:34Both.. see Hamilton's post safety car run.. & the advantages are manifold.. with various potentials such as..siskue2005 wrote: ↑26 Aug 2017, 16:04how much advantage is this oil burning? is it only useful in qualy or more useful in the race?
..fuel burn catalyst carrier/additional energy as defacto fuel/mech-pressure sealing/friction reduction/& etc..
With being on the side of off-topic, but maybe ok here as customers do not have the Q-mode: Ferrari had a less well applied technique with extra oil in an extra oil tank. This is all banned. For Merc only the amount of oil changes. So there should be no change on the Q-mode. But the ~2-4 laps they can go in this mode during the race will be reduced.siskue2005 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 08:22but the rule only take effect from next week onwards, which means that Vettel also had engine which can burn that much oil. So ur point is not valid.J.A.W. wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 03:34Both.. see Hamilton's post safety car run.. & the advantages are manifold.. with various potentials such as..siskue2005 wrote: ↑26 Aug 2017, 16:04how much advantage is this oil burning? is it only useful in qualy or more useful in the race?
..fuel burn catalyst carrier/additional energy as defacto fuel/mech-pressure sealing/friction reduction/& etc..
"...ur point is not valid."?siskue2005 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 08:22but the rule only take effect from next week onwards, which means that Vettel also had engine which can burn that much oil. So ur point is not valid.J.A.W. wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 03:34Both.. see Hamilton's post safety car run.. & the advantages are manifold.. with various potentials such as..siskue2005 wrote: ↑26 Aug 2017, 16:04how much advantage is this oil burning? is it only useful in qualy or more useful in the race?
..fuel burn catalyst carrier/additional energy as defacto fuel/mech-pressure sealing/friction reduction/& etc..
The rule only apllies for engines introduced in Monza and afterwards. Meaning Mercedes will not be affected by this new directive, and probably promptly introduced the engine to circumvent itbasti313 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 10:04With being on the side of off-topic, but maybe ok here as customers do not have the Q-mode: Ferrari had a less well applied technique with extra oil in an extra oil tank. This is all banned. For Merc only the amount of oil changes. So there should be no change on the Q-mode. But the ~2-4 laps they can go in this mode during the race will be reduced.siskue2005 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 08:22but the rule only take effect from next week onwards, which means that Vettel also had engine which can burn that much oil. So ur point is not valid.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/consu ... 45275/?s=1Big Mangalhit wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 12:14The rule only apllies for engines introduced in Monza and afterwards. Meaning Mercedes will not be affected by this new directive, and probably promptly introduced the engine to circumvent itbasti313 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 10:04With being on the side of off-topic, but maybe ok here as customers do not have the Q-mode: Ferrari had a less well applied technique with extra oil in an extra oil tank. This is all banned. For Merc only the amount of oil changes. So there should be no change on the Q-mode. But the ~2-4 laps they can go in this mode during the race will be reduced.siskue2005 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 08:22
but the rule only take effect from next week onwards, which means that Vettel also had engine which can burn that much oil. So ur point is not valid.
I was fooled by this one too. But this whole page of words is based only on one sentence of Charlie Whiting, which unfortunately tells nothing about engine Nr.4 in the Merc.itwasntme wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 12:28https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/consu ... 45275/?s=1Big Mangalhit wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 12:14The rule only apllies for engines introduced in Monza and afterwards. Meaning Mercedes will not be affected by this new directive, and probably promptly introduced the engine to circumvent itbasti313 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2017, 10:04
With being on the side of off-topic, but maybe ok here as customers do not have the Q-mode: Ferrari had a less well applied technique with extra oil in an extra oil tank. This is all banned. For Merc only the amount of oil changes. So there should be no change on the Q-mode. But the ~2-4 laps they can go in this mode during the race will be reduced.
Last year I believe only their barge board package visibly benefited from machine learning(I hate the term AI as it is not true AI), this excluded the elements under the tub, though.
Dumbed down it is essentially just doing what a human does. The difference is that a computer can do calculations much faster, and thus is capable to come up with more detailed solutions. It is machine learning, so it probably knows the aerodynamic rules and has learned their application on the current car. It can see results to a much more detailed degree and can do so much quicker than a human could.henry wrote: ↑27 Aug 2017, 10:24What do you think the AI would be iterating towards? If the end goal is aerodynamic performance, what measure might it use if it can't use CFD? Or is the AI given the surfaces but iterates to some other goal such as weight or stiffness?
I'm not trying to trip you up here. I too have heard that Mercedes used some form of AI on their W floor and I'm genuinely interested in how it might be employed.
Are you suggesting an alternative, non conventional, CFD method? So that the machine design algorithm can evaluate aerodynamic outcomes as it iterates designs?Zynerji wrote: ↑27 Aug 2017, 18:55Honestly, I would use a bi-directional ray tracer, and change the "bounce" math with Navier-Stokes math.
Then you start with the basic box of the car, tell it what ray densities you would like in certain areas (pressures), and let it iterate until it converges.
I spoke at length with Dade from LuxRender, and he said this is not simple, but absolutely possible. It was beyond his scope for that project, but he did give me his blessing to modify it to this end.
The bi-directional nature of a ray tracer would be the key to this, as CFD is not bi-directional (when I was looking at this in 2010).