Why not?
I'm not sure I agree with that Zynerji. One of the issues is that the driver is not in control of the engine/PU, the ECU is. The driver demands torque via the pedal and Hal (who resides in the ECU) performs all the voting magic to give the driver exactly what he or she requested. If the driver no longer demands torque and instead the throttle pedal was precisely that (it directly controls the amount of air entering the engine), then I believe things would be different.Zynerji wrote: ↑27 Apr 2018, 14:44Pat Symonds give an interview in 2009 where he clearly stated that the problem is that they cannot give the driver more engine power than the chassis can handle, like they could in the 90s. He literally stated that the problem was that they could build too good of a chassis to ever bring back that level of driver making the difference.
Was thinking at the time that an angled driveshaft, pretty much following the profile of the existing noses, would be less obstructive to the airflow volume under the nose. Then again, the motor can be pretty tiny depending on gearing and construction, so you may be right.
If you gave them 1800HP with turbo lag maybe. Hal is the optimizer, not the authority.Blaze1 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 20:51I'm not sure I agree with that Zynerji. One of the issues is that the driver is not in control of the engine/PU, the ECU is. The driver demands torque via the pedal and Hal (who resides in the ECU) performs all the voting magic to give the driver exactly what he or she requested. If the driver no longer demands torque and instead the throttle pedal was precisely that (it directly controls the amount of air entering the engine), then I believe things would be different.Zynerji wrote: ↑27 Apr 2018, 14:44Pat Symonds give an interview in 2009 where he clearly stated that the problem is that they cannot give the driver more engine power than the chassis can handle, like they could in the 90s. He literally stated that the problem was that they could build too good of a chassis to ever bring back that level of driver making the difference.
Hal is both. There are times where a drivers request will not be honoured e.g rev limit and other protection modes. In any event optimisation is hugely influential in the characteristics of the engine. There are also open-loop wheel spin-up protection maps, as well as open loop rear wheel ABS.Zynerji wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 21:29If you gave them 1800HP with turbo lag maybe. Hal is the optimizer, not the authority.Blaze1 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 20:51I'm not sure I agree with that Zynerji. One of the issues is that the driver is not in control of the engine/PU, the ECU is. The driver demands torque via the pedal and Hal (who resides in the ECU) performs all the voting magic to give the driver exactly what he or she requested. If the driver no longer demands torque and instead the throttle pedal was precisely that (it directly controls the amount of air entering the engine), then I believe things would be different.Zynerji wrote: ↑27 Apr 2018, 14:44Pat Symonds give an interview in 2009 where he clearly stated that the problem is that they cannot give the driver more engine power than the chassis can handle, like they could in the 90s. He literally stated that the problem was that they could build too good of a chassis to ever bring back that level of driver making the difference.
Yes. I agree with all of that, just like nothing is "fully rigid" even tho specified in that manner.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 22:21the last two items cannot be banned entirely
the genie can't be put back in the bottle - 'they' can control only the size of the genie (to 120 kW and 200 Nm equiv)
if you disagree please explain how they can be banned
what steady change response and dynamic response to be specified and enforced - by whom, when, and how ?
banning would need to prevent any inherent dynamic characteristic changing torque with change in load (grip)
even a spec system would have such a characteristic
That actually sounds like it would be very Road relevant technology. I wish they would add a front mgu and keep the H on the turbo.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 23:32the MGU-K torque map or equivalent will be similar (for motoring) to the ICE torque map
the actual map required is a PU map
but these maps define steady state behaviour not the various dynamic MG behaviours under varying load
the Porsche has an induction MG - and a synchronous MG can be designed around asynchronous behaviour
both these and other approaches will passively produce a convenient torque collapse under rapidly varying load
Can't these behaviours be monitored?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 23:32the MGU-K torque map or equivalent will be similar (for motoring) to the ICE torque map
the actual map required is a PU map
but these maps define steady state behaviour not the various dynamic MG behaviours under varying load
the Porsche has an induction MG - and a synchronous MG can be designed around asynchronous behaviour
both these and other approaches will passively produce a convenient torque collapse under rapidly varying load
whilst having a steady state map showing no torque collapse
Sure, but isn't that limiting operating modes of hardware that passes legal inspection? Are you specifically suggesting that you don't allow the engineers to optimize the machines that they spend hundreds of millions to build?Blaze1 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 23:51Can't these behaviours be monitored?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 23:32the MGU-K torque map or equivalent will be similar (for motoring) to the ICE torque map
the actual map required is a PU map
but these maps define steady state behaviour not the various dynamic MG behaviours under varying load
the Porsche has an induction MG - and a synchronous MG can be designed around asynchronous behaviour
both these and other approaches will passively produce a convenient torque collapse under rapidly varying load
whilst having a steady state map showing no torque collapse