Thanks for the interesting response, TC. Even in an ideal even firing engine, there should some peaks-and-valleys in the output, resulting from the variation in force applied by any single cylinder unto the crankshaft i.e. the torque curve of a single cylinder, peaking at TDC and falling til 90*-beyond-TDC towards nil at BDC (just my intuition, I'm not exactly sure what the torque curve on the expansion stroke looks like).Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑16 Nov 2017, 12:58roon is asking for K behaviour better than an extra V6 ICE slaved in ideal phase to the ICE ie to better an even-firing V12roon wrote:Is it about filling in the torque curve, or filling in between combustion events? It could be that it smooths the power delivery of the ICE that it is attached to. The electric motor is used to fill in the gaps between combustion strokes. Thus a hybrid power unit can deliver constant torque like an electric motor.
In F1, the K is appropriately sized for this; 160hp being more than what a single cylinder can deliver (~140 hp). But is the K still selectively deployed? I don't think they're pulsing the K on and off for an entire lap.
But if they are, the smooth power output might help the longevity of the transmissions that we see. It may even influence chassis design. The 90 deg cylinder bank angle being better for installation into the chassis, but not ideal for a V6 engine. But it doesn't matter--torque fill could make the bank angle irrelevant.
doesn't electric torque filling of ICE cyclic torque need a much bigger electrical machine than a 160 hp MGU-K ?
ie a machine whose peak torque matches the in-cycle peak torque of a cylinder
the 'size' of the electrical machine and what drives it being closely related to peak torque
this difficulty is additional to those PHead has just mentioned
super responsive electric machines here are not as 'constant' as roon hopes - these characteristics are mutually exclusive
to produce by in-cycle torque filling a constant torque is particularly demanding
these (synchronous or reluctance) machines are in effect magnetic gears
we already need control miracles to prevent these 'gears' slipping given the ICE rpm/torque excursions of shifting etc
why beat ourselves to death for no benefit ? - given the load path to Earth is a low-pass 1 Hz mechanical filter
the K's dynamic response in-cycle will be much worse than the ICE's mechanically but not worse electromagnetically
ie it could produce torque pulses as rapid as the combustion torque pulses if (as is) there is a dominant velocity-related load
such torque pulses are an abnormal requirement and may be impossible electrically without some shortfall for various reasons
I can't keep up with your cleverness here. A reference to tires, transmission?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑16 Nov 2017, 12:58why beat ourselves to death for no benefit ? - given the load path to Earth is a low-pass 1 Hz mechanical filter
A reference to everything I think. Inertias at the engine end, elasticity in the driveline (including tyres). Not sure if 1Hz would be the cutoff frequency for an F1 - given the extreme lightness of everything that moves.roon wrote: ↑16 Nov 2017, 23:57I can't keep up with your cleverness here. A reference to tires, transmission?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑16 Nov 2017, 12:58why beat ourselves to death for no benefit ? - given the load path to Earth is a low-pass 1 Hz mechanical filter
Yes, three times per rev. This being too high frequency for control? Or were you considering something else? At lower revs, not really an issue for F1, there would perhaps be more a noticable effect. Consider the uptake of pendulum mass dampers in production cars. Could their effect be simulated by electric motor action?
1.5 times for uneven firing. The K is geared at about 3.3:1 so I think even with a single pole pair it could produce a sufficiently high frequency.roon wrote: ↑18 Nov 2017, 00:10Yes, three times per rev. This being too high frequency for control? Or were you considering something else? At lower revs, not really an issue for F1, there would perhaps be more a noticable effect. Consider the uptake of pendulum mass dampers in production cars. Could their effect be simulated by electric motor action?
F1's K is geared something like 8:1 to the crankshaft. Does this aid motor control? Seems like it would.
120kg/h is to compensate for the losses by dumping the mgu-h. No more exhaust energy recovery, more fuel consumption needed. They still need to think of additional rules to increase rpm. For example increase fuel flow with rpm, reaching max flow only at max rpm. (120kg/h at 15000rpm). Limit boost, Turbo size or compression ratio.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑17 Nov 2017, 01:53I don't know if this was discussed already. But I saw somewhere that for 2021 the FIA is considering an increase of the fuel flow limit to 120kg/h, so the engines can run at higher speeds to make the noise better. But that got me thinking:
If they want to make manufacturers run their engines at higher speeds, can this not be achieved simply by reducing displacement or creating a boost limit? Will 120kg/h not make engines too powerful?
So it remains an efficiency formula with a different flow rate & curve. All the difficulties associated with combustion optimization remain. Merc continue to lead.NL_Fer wrote: ↑18 Nov 2017, 04:50120kg/h is to compensate for the losses by dumping the mgu-h. No more exhaust energy recovery, more fuel consumption needed. They still need to think of additional rules to increase rpm. For example increase fuel flow with rpm, reaching max flow only at max rpm. (120kg/h at 15000rpm). Limit boost, Turbo size or compression ratio.
Impossible to control but more to the point - almost entirely removed by the low-pass filter (engine rotating inertia driving an elastic driveline) so the tyres don't feel this.
Nog quite. Allot of Merc gains are made by the mgu-h. Yes it also needs superefficient combustion, but they need the mgu-h to make the energy usable at the wheels. A significant part of Mercs advantage will be lost. Why would Toto be lobbying for the mgu-h to remain?roon wrote: ↑19 Nov 2017, 00:17So it remains an efficiency formula with a different flow rate & curve. All the difficulties associated with combustion optimization remain. Merc continue to lead.NL_Fer wrote: ↑18 Nov 2017, 04:50120kg/h is to compensate for the losses by dumping the mgu-h. No more exhaust energy recovery, more fuel consumption needed. They still need to think of additional rules to increase rpm. For example increase fuel flow with rpm, reaching max flow only at max rpm. (120kg/h at 15000rpm). Limit boost, Turbo size or compression ratio.