well the piston CR is limited by the rules
and by the engineering practicalities eg the volume required for valve motion
limited with a max CR, not a minimal. It's set on 1:18, to rule out diesel I guess.... I assume that F1 PU's don't run higher then 1:10 or something.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑19 Dec 2017, 19:59well the piston CR is limited by the rules
and by the engineering practicalities eg the volume required for valve motion
This is not correct.
The V6 should be better as a stressed member than the longer V8s and V10s.graham.reeds wrote: ↑19 Dec 2017, 10:03You are forgetting that an I3 would be too small to become a stressed member.
I remember Adrian Newey saying that the small V6 was right on the limit.
No it won't, the pressure in the cylinders is just higher. Same air/fuel but in a smaller cylinder... same energy. If lower cylinder pressure would give more power with the same fuel flow, the current F1 PU's would rev to 15.000 rpm. Somehow low revs and high pressure is good for power and efficiency
Same boost = same pressure.Jolle wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 10:13No it won't, the pressure in the cylinders is just higher. Same air/fuel but in a smaller cylinder... same energy. If lower cylinder pressure would give more power with the same fuel flow, the current F1 PU's would rev to 15.000 rpm. Somehow low revs and high pressure is good for power and efficiency
I'm sorry, but that is not how a turbo engine works, that is how a NA works.wuzak wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 14:10Same boost = same pressure.Jolle wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 10:13No it won't, the pressure in the cylinders is just higher. Same air/fuel but in a smaller cylinder... same energy. If lower cylinder pressure would give more power with the same fuel flow, the current F1 PU's would rev to 15.000 rpm. Somehow low revs and high pressure is good for power and efficiency
If they have the same air/fuel [mass flow rate] and boost, the 1L engine will need to have 7 times the rpm to take the volumetric flow rate.
why, if a low CR is not efficient, do the current F1 teams all go for lowest revs they can be which means the highest cylinder pressure and therefor the lowest CR?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 16:30high boost/low CR is a recipe for power at the expense of engine efficiency
(often useful in aircraft - and some relieved inefficiency by exhaust recovery turbine or (at high speed) exhaust 'jet' effect)
the cylinder doesn't know whether it's in a turbo engine or an NA engine - only the designer does
many centrifugal induction-impeller engines and turbo engines gave/give only NA-level induction pressures
I fail to see what the size of the K unit has to do with the rpm or boost of the ICE.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 17:20I wrote engine efficiency - meaning ICE efficiency not PU efficiency
CR (or really expansion ratio) is fundamental to conversion of heat to work (in any stage of a simple or compound engine)
if the rules dictated a smaller MGU-K then we might see higher rpm/lower boost
though I'm not suggesting that 15000 rpm allows much higher CR than does 10500
remember higher boosts do not give higher recovery (because compressor work rises strongly with boost)
the rules in effect demand a weakly-compounded engine
other levels of compounding are possible, but heavy compounding is/was restricted to CI (eg 15 bar boost Hyperbar CI 2 T ?)
500 bar DI as now allowed might with multiple injections allow an SI engine to have CI type CRs ?
Because the fuel flow rate is on a ramp, and lower rpm means less fuel, which means less power.
At the same RPM, a 1L turbo engine will require a pressure ratio of 7:1 to the the same mass of air into the cylinder as a 7L non-turbo engine. Assuming the same volumetric efficiency, which probably wouldn't be the case (and would bring down the PR required).Jolle wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 15:07I'm sorry, but that is not how a turbo engine works, that is how a NA works.wuzak wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 14:10Same boost = same pressure.Jolle wrote: ↑21 Dec 2017, 10:13
No it won't, the pressure in the cylinders is just higher. Same air/fuel but in a smaller cylinder... same energy. If lower cylinder pressure would give more power with the same fuel flow, the current F1 PU's would rev to 15.000 rpm. Somehow low revs and high pressure is good for power and efficiency
If they have the same air/fuel [mass flow rate] and boost, the 1L engine will need to have 7 times the rpm to take the volumetric flow rate.
A turbo enige forces the air into the cylinder. For instance, if you have a NA 1L engine, at 10.000 revs, you have 0.5L of air (1 bar) per cycle, 10.000 cycles per minute is 5000 liters of air at 1 bar which will give for instance 150bhp.
If you turbocharge that with 2 bar at 10.000rpm you will have 1L of air per cycle at pushed into the engine (compressed into 0,5L) which gives 10.000 liters of air per minute which will double the power and gives you a theoretical 300 bhp.
To keep the combustion pressure the same, the compression ratio has to come down the same amount. lets say the NA engine has a ratio of 1:14, the turbo with 2 bar of pressure has a ratio of 1:7. This way the air/fuel mixture will be compressed the same, just with twice the amount of air/fuel in the cylinder, so twice the amount of energy.
So as you see, revs at a turbo engine is unimportant (in theory), it's all about boost. If you want more power, you turn op the boost and lower the compression ratio.
Could be, could also be to rule out the use of diesel. Which has more energy per kg but isn’t very F1wuzak wrote: ↑22 Dec 2017, 01:26Because the fuel flow rate is on a ramp, and lower rpm means less fuel, which means less power.
They are hardly running at low CRs. The rues had a maximum CR of 18:1 inserted into the rules last year. Which suggests that the manufacturers were working towards that sort of number.