picture from his drivetribe site.
I seriously cannot believe that it is oily fumesF1NAC wrote: ↑28 Feb 2018, 10:57As Scarbs mentioned on twitter its from crankcase breather. Teams used burned oil to guide towards airbox, for this year they need to ensure that all oil that is burning is coming from the rear crash structure
https://drivetribe.imgix.net/XyyRVOiFQv ... aces,edges
picture from his drivetribe site.
Ok, hypothetical thought... Is there any rule restricting where the engine can breath air from? If not, would it make sense having the turbine suck a tiny amount of air from above the crash structure just underneath the ducktail?Sieper wrote: ↑28 Feb 2018, 12:36I canI posted that expectation yesterday when the pictures were posted. So last year these fumes went straight into the plenum (with additives to have the gasoline burn butter, less knock etc.) via a special valve that could be opened for that via the software. Said to have given 20 extra horses. And it seems that although it is now outlawed to have any fumes enter he plenum in this way that Merc and Ferr have found another way to still achieve some benefit. Or at least Horners has said the oil clampdown was not strict enough.
5.14.1 With the exception of incidental leakage through joints or cooling ducts in the inlet system (either into or out of the system), all air entering the engine must enter the bodywork through a maximum of two inlets which are located:
a) Between the front of the cockpit entry template and a point 500mm forward of the rear wheel centre line longitudinally.
b) No less than 200mm above the reference plane vertically.
c) On vertical cross-sections parallel to C-C.
1158 wrote: ↑28 Feb 2018, 13:265.14.1 With the exception of incidental leakage through joints or cooling ducts in the inlet system (either into or out of the system), all air entering the engine must enter the bodywork through a maximum of two inlets which are located:
a) Between the front of the cockpit entry template and a point 500mm forward of the rear wheel centre line longitudinally.
b) No less than 200mm above the reference plane vertically.
c) On vertical cross-sections parallel to C-C.
5.14.2
Other than engine sump breather gases, exhaust gas recirculation, and fuel for the normal
purpose of combustion in the engine, the spraying of any substance into the engine intake air
is forbidden.
That tells me you can still run a PCV setup with a passive check valve. You would need to figure out a way to induce a vacuum condition in the intake to get the additives out of the crankcase and into the engine. I'm sure they have...7.9 Oil injection
The use of active control valves between any part of the PU and the engine intake air is
forbidden.
What if the variable intake trumpets were used to block/open the feed for the breather line. It would mean having 6 lines, but would it be legal?7.9 Oil injection
The use of active control valves between any part of the PU and the engine intake air is
forbidden.
I would call that an active control device.1158 wrote: ↑28 Feb 2018, 14:10About this:
What if the variable intake trumpets were used to block/open the feed for the breather line. It would mean having 6 lines, but would it be legal?7.9 Oil injection
The use of active control valves between any part of the PU and the engine intake air is
forbidden.
Horner was reffering to the fact that all these new restrictions are for the race and their are no such restrictions for qualifying.Sieper wrote: ↑28 Feb 2018, 12:36I canI posted that expectation yesterday when the pictures were posted. So last year these fumes went straight into the plenum (with additives to have the gasoline burn butter, less knock etc.) via a special valve that could be opened for that via the software. Said to have given 20 extra horses. And it seems that although it is now outlawed to have any fumes enter he plenum in this way that Merc and Ferr have found another way to still achieve some benefit. Or at least Horners has said the oil clampdown was not strict enough.