Just like movable aero is banned, except for wings on brake ducts...Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑10 Jul 2018, 23:33burning fuel to make electricity is energy accumulation - but energy accumulation from fuel accumulation is banned
Just like movable aero is banned, except for wings on brake ducts...Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑10 Jul 2018, 23:33burning fuel to make electricity is energy accumulation - but energy accumulation from fuel accumulation is banned
I most certainly value the efforts of the Wazari team - especially the latest, not yet debuted spec with the new turbine, with the new fuel and proper mapping. But I think a lot of us (and millions of viewers) would be perfectly content with an ancient Suzuka Special V10 DOWNGRADED with a mechanical throttle linkage. No hidden software, no auto-deleting cheatery - just a foot, wires, linkage and LOUD, fascinating power.
Better fuel efficiency = less fuel carried = better lap times.
Less fuel consumption is a challenge too if you want to see fight of technology to technology, engineering to engineering and driver to driver. If you just want to watch driver ability than there must be a serie that the standart cars racing.Bence wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 01:44I most certainly value the efforts of the Wazari team - especially the latest, not yet debuted spec with the new turbine, with the new fuel and proper mapping. But I think a lot of us (and millions of viewers) would be perfectly content with an ancient Suzuka Special V10 DOWNGRADED with a mechanical throttle linkage. No hidden software, no auto-deleting cheatery - just a foot, wires, linkage and LOUD, fascinating power.
The artificially generated perception of an "economical F1 engine" is BS. These turbos are not clean either; FAR from it. So why the fuss?
Do you really want some juicy Prius-tech in your EFF ONE racers? Where does fuel consumption really counts in flat-out racing? Does anyone think in the crowd on the grandstands that "oh, how lucky we are that those Honda/Merc/Ferrari/etc engines don't consume more fuel, because if they'd slurp more, I'd immediately quit watching the series"... Nonsense! It's just a form of a skewed, tech-driven bean counterism. People simply want to look/feel like cactuses when a thundering race engine pulls by...
And the whole philosophy is directly related to technical aspects, yes. Does the new Honda weigh more? Yup. Is it physically larger? Check. But it is also more rigid torsionally and more powerful. So, is this concept an advanced one? Yes, definitely.
But personally, I see more elegance in a VHS cassette than in a USB stick. I'd take a tourbillon over an LCD watch any day. THAT is orchestrated synergy; a dance of fascinating energy paths. A tourbillon is way more than the sum of its parts. And anyone who doesn't understand the Antikythera mechanism, should not play with lightning/electricity.
And most importantly: do they perform that they were designed for? Yes, even with their shortcomings. Does the cassette contain playable videos/films? Ahem. Capacity & quick access? Nooope. Does the tourbillon show time? Surely. Do you accuse it for being unable to show emails?
Were the MIXED V12/V10/V8s wonderful racing engines? Starting together? On the straights? Were they thirsty? HELL, YES! And nobody missed anything.
You missed one crucial thing. Would the manufacturers be interested in your proposed engine? With the exception of Ferrari, probably not. The other manufacturers want something they can bring to road cars. And yes, Mercedes is actually developing the MGU-H for diesel trucks. In fact, all of them want to keep it according to interviews.Bence wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 01:44I most certainly value the efforts of the Wazari team - especially the latest, not yet debuted spec with the new turbine, with the new fuel and proper mapping. But I think a lot of us (and millions of viewers) would be perfectly content with an ancient Suzuka Special V10 DOWNGRADED with a mechanical throttle linkage. No hidden software, no auto-deleting cheatery - just a foot, wires, linkage and LOUD, fascinating power.
The artificially generated perception of an "economical F1 engine" is BS. These turbos are not clean either; FAR from it. So why the fuss?
Do you really want some juicy Prius-tech in your EFF ONE racers? Where does fuel consumption really counts in flat-out racing? Does anyone think in the crowd on the grandstands that "oh, how lucky we are that those Honda/Merc/Ferrari/etc engines don't consume more fuel, because if they'd slurp more, I'd immediately quit watching the series"... Nonsense! It's just a form of a skewed, tech-driven bean counterism. People simply want to look/feel like cactuses when a thundering race engine pulls by...
And the whole philosophy is directly related to technical aspects, yes. Does the new Honda weigh more? Yup. Is it physically larger? Check. But it is also more rigid torsionally and more powerful. So, is this concept an advanced one? Yes, definitely.
But personally, I see more elegance in a VHS cassette than in a USB stick. I'd take a tourbillon over an LCD watch any day. THAT is orchestrated synergy; a dance of fascinating energy paths. A tourbillon is way more than the sum of its parts. And anyone who doesn't understand the Antikythera mechanism, should not play with lightning/electricity.
And most importantly: do they perform that they were designed for? Yes, even with their shortcomings. Does the cassette contain playable videos/films? Ahem. Capacity & quick access? Nooope. Does the tourbillon show time? Surely. Do you accuse it for being unable to show emails?
Were the MIXED V12/V10/V8s wonderful racing engines? Starting together? On the straights? Were they thirsty? HELL, YES! And nobody missed anything.
I think Honda always did want to keep the MGUH but are simply politically invisible so didn't publicise that until now. I don't understand why Honda continue with this kind of attitude towards politics as it has cost them a lot throughout their history. Even when the current engine regulations were being drawn up and Honda were rumoured to be interested they didn't bother turning up to the meetings were the new rules were discussed. Even companies that had little interest in F1 turned up to those.godlameroso wrote: ↑10 Jul 2018, 14:11Looks like the current power units are going to stay beyond 2021, maybe some standardized parts. Particularly interesting that Honda wants to keep the MGU-H all of a sudden. That to me is very telling in a general sense.
Twin turbochargers would bring a slight efficiency penalty so that might be a difficult decision - in a fuel-flow restricted formula.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑10 Jul 2018, 23:33without the MGU-H they would surely use twin turbochargers - so reducing lag
no doubt Mercedes efficiency figures are for performance when not burning fuel to make electricity
burning fuel to make electricity is energy accumulation - but energy accumulation from fuel accumulation is of course banned
energy accumulation has the wonderful property of allowing energy to be used when most laptime-effective
Of course I meant the spectator POV, not the engineering side.wuzak wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 06:34Better fuel efficiency = less fuel carried = better lap times.
Since the ban on refuelling the teams have regularly under-filled their cars, which requires periods of fuel saving. They do this because the lap time gain from lower weight is greater than that lost from lower power settings.
I wouldn't be surprised if Merc had it from the start. Part of their strategic sandbagging. Since 2014 there had been the opportunity to have full duration use of the MGUK so long as your H was big enough to power it directly. Power gains observed over the seasons could have come mainly or exclusively from combustion/ICE development, with electric drive develoments largely static.