a few days ago someone PM'd me saying his inside info says F1 uses near stoichiometric mixture
my reaction is at 4 bar induction pressure the mixture must be very lean unless the valve timing is most unconventional
but if there's Prius-style abnormally late IV closure or Fiat-style abnormally early IV closure the VE is not as expected
ie in F1 we could have eg 4 bar induction pressure producing far less air massflow than expected ie near-stoichiometry
simple questions -
is the work done by the compressor proportionate to the induction pressure regardless of the delivery ? or ..
is the work done by the compressor proportionate to the induction pressure multiplied by the delivery ? or ..
to something else ?
this aspect is analogous to the 2 stroke case
and is important to boosted and compounded 2 strokes
regarding 2 stroke true diesels aka slow-speed diesels
the crosshead Wartsila went to very low rpm and very large displacement, for direct drive of ever larger propellors
the other crosheadhead true diesel maker went to higher rpm etc
but passenger ships have no room for crosshead engines
their trunk piston engines now have very high powers with very good efficiency - ship people would call them medium-speed
surely there is something to be learned from products other than Wartsila's ?
btw regarding the efficiency of air propellors
the exhaust thrust of aircraft engines substantially increases propulsive force (thrust) at conventional speeds
eg 20% at 400 mph and 30% at 500 mph
so propulsive efficiency approaches or exceeds 100% of crankshaft power
(and coolant heat can be applied to suitable aerodynamic ducts to increase 'free' thrust further)