Definitely not offtopic. I'm wondering what is changing within the maps that it 'only' is worth 0.05-0.1 a lap. Top end grunt I suppose? Maybe we could compare top speed charts from friday to saturday, or the qualifying sessions, to see if the max has increased.ripper wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 10:37I don't know if it is offtopic:
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/la-me ... o-1030966/
Short translation:
- from today (Baku's qualy) teams that use Mercedes PU will be able to use more aggressive maps.
- Szafnauer (from Force India) said that this map should give 0.1 or 0.05 sec per lap
- there's a map called "race-plus" that is the most powerful one usable during race and they will be able to use it for 20-30 km more
Good point. All things being equal & perfectly developed, the split turbo will need a longer shaft than the conventional design. In practice, the potential weight, inertia, and friction disadvantages of the split turbo will still be balanced against the effects of compressor temperature, charge piping, component mass distribution, turbine location and resultant manifold designs, etc.
The words "race plus" sort of hint that is it a mode on the ERS deployment. I am gonna guess and say it for the entire power band because you need that acceleration going onto the long straight. That should easily make up the one tenth.Jejking wrote: ↑30 Apr 2018, 00:06Definitely not offtopic. I'm wondering what is changing within the maps that it 'only' is worth 0.05-0.1 a lap. Top end grunt I suppose? Maybe we could compare top speed charts from friday to saturday, or the qualifying sessions, to see if the max has increased.ripper wrote: ↑28 Apr 2018, 10:37I don't know if it is offtopic:
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/la-me ... o-1030966/
Short translation:
- from today (Baku's qualy) teams that use Mercedes PU will be able to use more aggressive maps.
- Szafnauer (from Force India) said that this map should give 0.1 or 0.05 sec per lap
- there's a map called "race-plus" that is the most powerful one usable during race and they will be able to use it for 20-30 km more
Special pistons, i'd think they've mastered AM steel pistons to the point where they're superior to conventional Al material issues. The added design flexibility, combined with TJI's lower temperature lean combustion. Ultimately reducing losses from less reciprocating mass and inertia.
A difFErent material.
Once they iron out the problems they will steel a march in the others.