You're always limited by the equations governing your mesh, the ol' garbage in garbage out problem.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Feb 2018, 00:49High end CFD software also have adaptive meshes these days too.
The answer would be yes. Speaking from Honda's PU, there are very creative/innovative piston crown/ports being utilized.godlameroso wrote: ↑08 Feb 2018, 23:37Wazari wrote: ↑
FW17 wrote:
Hi Wazari
Are there any methods of flame quenching away from piston crown and cylinder walls currently being used in F1
What are the likely ways of achieving this?
1. I think I would assume so.
2. Various methods. CC design or lack of CC as we conventionally know it , piston groves, diagonal piston ports, slots, etc.
Just mulling over this, that's all. I could be way off, sure good meshes can be done in a day, but have them be as accurate with complex shapes and that afternoon can turn into a few months.
And I'm not talking about the thermodynamics that's child's play. I'm talking about the fuel reaction chemistry side of it. You can't develop your process if you can't see how your process influences the reactions. The 50hp gain from Mercedes wasn't just some exotic fuel blend, but understanding and being able to take advantage of the way the fuel combusts.
If you can model how fuel combusts more accurately than the next guy, you can run it closer to the edge of detonation.
Why would it be even weeks? if You have to modify within known space and parameters?
The good old rotary four valve configuration. I had this on a Honda GB250 back in my teens. Remember pulling the tappet cover off to get a look at how it was setup. Did they ever do it in anything other than a single? The packaging looks too bulky for a bank of cylinders, let alone an f1 engine. Said bike was hardly a power house either.ncassi22 wrote: ↑09 Feb 2018, 00:16This a Honda RFVC engine. Interestingly if you increase the dome height it will still allow for a relatively large cavity/cup atop the piston without interfering with even full valve pockets. Alternatively or depending on how 'out-there' you want to be you it also allows space to inject fuel through the piston if that's a thing... Or create a raised area the pushes air/fuel to the pre-chamber through a transfer port close to the injector.
*edit - The point being it'll open up alot of space in the head for placement of injectors/plugs.
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-st15UChlTSc/V ... .01.16.jpg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-BBgX7FIfqbY/V ... G_7978.JPG
Of course if they can do it by altering existing tooling then it should be quite quick. I assumed new tooling is required.
Spec 4.0 is the one that we specifically worked on with "our" designed combustion components. There really isn't a bastard version. Only the basic architecture remains the same. The physical dimensions remain fairly close. The two versions being tested now for the upcoming season are both Spec 4.0 based with upgrades. There is a completely "new" combustion process PU that is built but with almost zero running time at this moment. I assume that is the major mid-season planned PU. Also both "new" PU's have logged considerably more KM's than 2,500 without any major issues so I don't where this "only lasts 2,500 KM's" rumor is coming from.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Feb 2018, 22:58Wazari seems to be confident in this new engine. The bastard of the Spec 3 and Spec 4. Yet we are promised an even better engine half way into the season. Which one is team Wazari spec? The bastard or the one coming in the summer?
Wazari, I suppose u cant elucidate on this new combustion design? maybe expounding limitation of TJI would be a good indicator. It seems this development was recent and not the same process used in 4.0 which quite frankly was last years contender. Do u think Honda can get to 1000hp peak this season? Would be remarkable and quite a turn around.Wazari wrote: ↑10 Feb 2018, 00:34
Spec 4.0 is the one that we specifically worked on with "our" designed combustion components. There really isn't a bastard version. Only the basic architecture remains the same. The physical dimensions remain fairly close. The two versions being tested now for the upcoming season are both Spec 4.0 based with upgrades. There is a completely "new" combustion process PU that is built but with almost zero running time at this moment. I assume that is the major mid-season planned PU. Also both "new" PU's have logged considerably more KM's than 2,500 without any major issues so I don't where this "only lasts 2,500 KM's" rumor is coming from.
Well as they say, there is more than one way to skin a cat. This formula as we know presents many challenges. Fuel load and flow limits, and IMO the most challenging to achieve the highest power from the ICE is the injector pressure restriction. Where you can be creative is the air-fuel ratio, how its delivered and ignited with one injector and spark plug. I think we all can also agree that some configuration of a pre-chamber is necessary which houses the spark plug to keep the extremely difficult to ignite lean mixture away. So if you can figure out how pre-ignite a richer mixture with the spark plug to ignite the super lean mixture in the main chamber, while at same time running the highest compression ratio possible for power and max volume of exhaust gases for the turbine, then you have an ICE that potentially can produce 850 HP from 1.6 L. To achieve max exhaust volume/velocity, you want an outside to inside ignition pattern in the main chamber with plasma jets to reach the outside edges of the piston utilizing the pre-chamber.McMika98 wrote: ↑10 Feb 2018, 01:11Wazari, I suppose u cant elucidate on this new combustion design? maybe expounding limitation of TJI would be a good indicator. It seems this development was recent and not the same process used in 4.0 which quite frankly was last years contender. Do u think Honda can get to 1000hp peak this season? Would be remarkable and quite a turn around.Wazari wrote: ↑10 Feb 2018, 00:34
Spec 4.0 is the one that we specifically worked on with "our" designed combustion components. There really isn't a bastard version. Only the basic architecture remains the same. The physical dimensions remain fairly close. The two versions being tested now for the upcoming season are both Spec 4.0 based with upgrades. There is a completely "new" combustion process PU that is built but with almost zero running time at this moment. I assume that is the major mid-season planned PU. Also both "new" PU's have logged considerably more KM's than 2,500 without any major issues so I don't where this "only lasts 2,500 KM's" rumor is coming from.