My counter-proposal is 100kg/h fuel flow rate, no race fuel limits, any engine configuration desired - Inline, V, W, radial or boxer 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 or 12 cylinder, multi-rotor Wankel rotary, gas turbine, steam engine, swing piston, 4 stroke, 2 stroke, 5 stroke, of any capacity they like. Can be supercharged or turbocharged, or both, or non-supercharged.
Or Mercedes offers their Turbo solution to Renault to keep itTommy Cookers wrote: ↑20 Sep 2017, 13:17that would be Mercedes that part-owns 'independent' Renault
both being in the EU and part-owned by the taxpayer
turbine recovery looks good on the testbench but is useless to the road car owner
I would agree to that if a priviso of using E85 fuel is stipulated. Just to make F1 a little more environmentally friendly. Plus e85 makes a nice smell when burnt.wuzak wrote: ↑22 Sep 2017, 04:35My counter-proposal is 100kg/h fuel flow rate, no race fuel limits, any engine configuration desired - Inline, V, W, radial or boxer 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 or 12 cylinder, multi-rotor Wankel rotary, gas turbine, steam engine, swing piston, 4 stroke, 2 stroke, 5 stroke, of any capacity they like. Can be supercharged or turbocharged, or both, or non-supercharged.
E85 is much lower in energy density than petrol. Would require much higher fuel flow rates and large fuel tanks. Or refueling.carisi2k wrote: ↑24 Sep 2017, 01:35I would agree to that if a priviso of using E85 fuel is stipulated. Just to make F1 a little more environmentally friendly. Plus e85 makes a nice smell when burnt.wuzak wrote: ↑22 Sep 2017, 04:35My counter-proposal is 100kg/h fuel flow rate, no race fuel limits, any engine configuration desired - Inline, V, W, radial or boxer 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 or 12 cylinder, multi-rotor Wankel rotary, gas turbine, steam engine, swing piston, 4 stroke, 2 stroke, 5 stroke, of any capacity they like. Can be supercharged or turbocharged, or both, or non-supercharged.
Nothing's cheap in F1
I was specifically thinking about the MGU-h here because it gets mentioned a lot. And sure: I can appreciate the delicacy of getting something fullfil power, a small weight and reliability.noname wrote: ↑25 Sep 2017, 15:00Nothing's cheap in F1
One has to remember it is not only about MGU-H. It is also power electronics, energy storage, etc. Power of these machines, their speed and usual F1 "make it as small and light as possible" (their power can be described as mind-blowing) make it challenging. Just imagine switches able to handle close to 100kW and few tens of kHz, and that's just one of the many examples.
Add to this complexity of the PU and energy flow. Developing strategies allowing extracting as much performance as possible with very high efficiency and really impressive reliability takes a lot of efforts (read: time and money). Engines are running on the dynos day and night, much more hardware is being consumed by testing than the racing itself.
Probably not as road relevant as a plain turbo would be, but for hybrids, trucks, busses and most of all: huge ships, this is highly relevant and used.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑25 Sep 2017, 15:35the H runs at c. 100000 rpm but the K runs at 'only' c. 35000 rpm
so maybe the H needs technology (in its 'drive' electronics) that's particularly difficult - and road-irrelevant
likewise the need to design around and manage the mechanical factors of super-high rpm operation
this below envisages machines of somewhat modest capability compared to F1's
http://www.highspeedgenerator.com/