You know, if you think about it, the extra harvest business...In a regular car that uses a belt driven supercharger, you sacrifice engine power to make boost. What you gain is higher than what you lose. These F1 cars have the capacity to drive the compressor exactly like a supercharger, except that the belt is electrical, and being electrical, can overcharge the compressor and store the excess in the battery. If the compressor takes 100kW, then the MGU-K can just brake the engine by that much and drive the compressor straight off the K, you have a potential 20 extra kW to harvest. You could charge the ES by the difference of the K energy and blowdown needed to keep the compressor running at optimum, and you'd have the advantage of low pumping losses due to having the wastegates wide open.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑05 May 2018, 20:01afaik
extra harvest bypasses the 2 MJ limit K charging ERS but not the 4 MJ limit (K+H) charging ERS
it's value is increasing (by the extra) the H energy available for directly driving the K
Here is where it gets tricky, if you have the wastegates wide open and are driving the compressor from a combination of electric belt supercharging and blow-down exhaust, will overall output be greater than if you could dedicate all 120kW of the K directly to the crank, while using the MGU-H as recovery to control high RPM overboost(surely increasing back pressure and pumping losses)? Do maps transition through these parameters through the rev range? Or is there an ideal happy medium?