Enough speculation about legality in the past. It's a hardware topic; unless someone can specifically point out the illegality of a part, this is not having a home here.
Removed a whole lot of posts.
If I understand correctly what you are saying you suggest that ferrari is using more than 4MJ from battery. This is not illegal .Phil wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 10:06
Assuming there is truth to Ferrari's battery exploit, it's inherently difficult to prove. Obviously, there is a sensor there by the FIA that all teams use that measures the amount of energy that passes through the sensor to make sure no more than 4MJ is used per lap. If there is truth to what the rumors say, there's a secondary circuit connecting to the battery that does not pass through the FIA's sensor.
The question that begs here: can one circumvent the 4MJ pull from the battery by getting the energy flow from the ES to the MGU-H to the MGU-K? Energy exchange between the battery and the MGU-H on one hand is unlimited, and energy exchange between MGU-H and MGU-K is also unlimited on the other hand. Only the energy exchange between the MGU-K and the ES is capped at 4MJ.sosic2121 wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 12:46If I understand correctly what you are saying you suggest that ferrari is using more than 4MJ from battery. This is not illegal .Phil wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 10:06
Assuming there is truth to Ferrari's battery exploit, it's inherently difficult to prove. Obviously, there is a sensor there by the FIA that all teams use that measures the amount of energy that passes through the sensor to make sure no more than 4MJ is used per lap. If there is truth to what the rumors say, there's a secondary circuit connecting to the battery that does not pass through the FIA's sensor.
State of charge of battery is limited to 4MJ, but you can charge and empty battery as many time you wish during one lap.
What is limited to 4MJ/lap is ES>MGU-K.
However, you energy can be sent energy via H.
ES>MGU-H>MGU-K this is also legal.
IF Ferrari is cheating, it's something else.
To be pedantic the output of the MGU-K is specified as 120 kW but it is controlled/monitored by the output of the control unit that drives it. The FIA predict the conversion efficiency at 95% so the output of the CU-K is allowed to be 126.3 kW. With the prescribed 4 MJ from the ES to the MGU-K the time is 31.66 seconds.turbof1 wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 14:29The question that begs here: can one circumvent the 4MJ pull from the battery by getting the energy flow from the ES to the MGU-H to the MGU-K? Energy exchange between the battery and the MGU-H on one hand is unlimited, and energy exchange between MGU-H and MGU-K is also unlimited on the other hand. Only the energy exchange between the MGU-K and the ES is capped at 4MJ.sosic2121 wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 12:46If I understand correctly what you are saying you suggest that ferrari is using more than 4MJ from battery. This is not illegal .Phil wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 10:06
Assuming there is truth to Ferrari's battery exploit, it's inherently difficult to prove. Obviously, there is a sensor there by the FIA that all teams use that measures the amount of energy that passes through the sensor to make sure no more than 4MJ is used per lap. If there is truth to what the rumors say, there's a secondary circuit connecting to the battery that does not pass through the FIA's sensor.
State of charge of battery is limited to 4MJ, but you can charge and empty battery as many time you wish during one lap.
What is limited to 4MJ/lap is ES>MGU-K.
However, you energy can be sent energy via H.
ES>MGU-H>MGU-K this is also legal.
IF Ferrari is cheating, it's something else.
Even if not allowed: the output of the MGU-K is 120kW. That is 0,12MJ/s. 4MJ will give you 33.33s of 120kW power, but you can also have 40s/50s/60s of 120 kW power, depending how much energy you can generate AND consume a the same time, from the mgu-h suplemented by the 4MJ from the battery. The energy generated does not have to be stored on ES, but can directly feed into the MGU-K deploy mode.
Usually, you are storing the MGU-K harvesting mode on the ES. Naturally, because you are braking so in no need for 'motion' energy. However, the MGU-H is generating the power when on the throttle, so you are going to spent that energy immediately instead of storing it on the ES because then you want enough 'motion' energy to sustain 120kW as long as possible.
But race director Charlie Whiting said more monitoring in Canada may now be necessary.
"I'm not saying we'll definitely do it, because I assume we will come to the same conclusion," he said.
"But Ferrari will make changes to the software in Canada. I'm not an expert, but we're trying to understand the difference of the two parts of the battery.
I found this interestingdans79 wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 17:25I noticed this earlier today!
http://www.grandprix.com/news/fia-to-ke ... anada.html
But race director Charlie Whiting said more monitoring in Canada may now be necessary.
"I'm not saying we'll definitely do it, because I assume we will come to the same conclusion," he said.
"But Ferrari will make changes to the software in Canada. I'm not an expert, but we're trying to understand the difference of the two parts of the battery.
So not two physical batteries at all. Or maybe it’s just that there is confusion about what “battery” means. I think of it as a fixed collection of connected cells. Maybe Ferrari’s take is more virtual selecting the collection on the fly. I can see how that might be difficult to understand.There is one battery, but the system perceives it as two," Whiting adding. "I don't think I'm giving anything away."
I saw that as well, but given that it's a Charlie quote I have not confidence that he has any idea what he is talking about.
Interesting indeed.henry wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 18:01I found this interestingdans79 wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 17:25I noticed this earlier today!
http://www.grandprix.com/news/fia-to-ke ... anada.html
But race director Charlie Whiting said more monitoring in Canada may now be necessary.
"I'm not saying we'll definitely do it, because I assume we will come to the same conclusion," he said.
"But Ferrari will make changes to the software in Canada. I'm not an expert, but we're trying to understand the difference of the two parts of the battery.
So not two physical batteries at all. Or maybe it’s just that there is confusion about what “battery” means. I think of it as a fixed collection of connected cells. Maybe Ferrari’s take is more virtual selecting the collection on the fly. I can see how that might be difficult to understand.There is one battery, but the system perceives it as two," Whiting adding. "I don't think I'm giving anything away."
I think we are missing something here.
That depends on how the FIA is regulating the 120kW limit. They are most likely just monitoring the the power sent to the MGU-K. Depending on the type of sensor the FIA used it could easily be intentionally or unintentionally fooled.
Might have been me. I brought it up in the Honda thread. viewtopic.php?p=734068#p734068 The H is an unlimited pathway between the ES and the K; only catch is there's a conversion loss. Electrical>kinetic>electrical. The Japanese article which was translated by Hino in the Honda thread suggested Honda switched back and forth between generating and motoring in order to treat the H as a secondary feed cable supplying the K. I was thinking it might be more elegant to have a dual stator to avoid switching and simply design half the H as an electrical-kinetic-electrical link.
So were they suspecting some trickery with PWM?
I assume MGU-K is connected with 2 leads.