Fabulous!
Now the others must catch up!
Would this be legal, and wouldn't the net result ultimately be less total power, what with neither system being 100% efficient?godlameroso wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 05:01...An engine driven ancillary delivering 15hp to the K at all times...
Not saying that anyone can or does but a few ways to put send more energy to the ES:siskue2005 wrote: ↑27 Jul 2018, 13:25As this is technical forum....please give technical details of how free load mode and full delpoyment of energy can be done on every single lap of the race?
So if teams are talking about 4.5MJ/lap vs 4MJ/lap of K motoring, surely that ends the speculation that "extra deployment" (ES>H>K) exists and therefore "extra harvest" (K>H>ES) also.bill shoe wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 04:42. . . . Competitors integrate each other's K-boost (120kW x time deployed) from the GPS data and see ~ 4 MJ per lap, per the nominal wording of the regulations. Except for Ferrari which by the same type of calculations is getting ~ 4.5 MJ per lap, maybe even more. . . .
What are they supposed to be the "trick" or “obfuscating in all this?. When I tried to explain the possibilities of ERS-K deployment allowed by the rules I was opposed/lambasted and voted down. I explained how some may choose to deploy for the full lap senza braking and lifting times and still be within the ERS-K deployment times. Some of ERS-K deployment examples time/power I gave: 120KW for 33.33 seconds per lap. 60KW for 66.66 seconds per lap. 40KW for 99.99 seconds per lap. 30KW for 133.32 seconds per lap or any combination of power and time that falls within what is permitted. I also gave link to Andy Cowell of Mercedes explaining all this.bill shoe wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 04:42AMuS article seems to show that the Ferrari advantage is an ability to deploy the 120 kW K-boost significantly longer than other powertrains. Ferrari continues this 120 kW boosting further along longer straights than competitors, but still has to back off toward the end and therefore has similar top speed at end of straight. So not really a increase in max power, but a boost in how long you can deploy your max power.
Competitors integrate each other's K-boost (120kW x time deployed) from the GPS data and see ~ 4 MJ per lap, per the nominal wording of the regulations. Except for Ferrari which by the same type of calculations is getting ~ 4.5 MJ per lap, maybe even more. Maybe it averages out to 38 hp over a lap or over a long straight, but when it (the trick) is on they get 120kW (160 hp) for a precious few extra seconds. OK.
Intuitive assumption when looking at the data is to assume the trick extends the time after the "normal" K-boost has finished. But there are two additional alternatives-
1). The trick is used at the beginning of the straight and the extra time at the end was actually the "normal" K-boost.
2). The trick is a small 15 kW addition the entire time, and Ferrari only uses the normal K-boost at the rate of ~ 105 kW. This effectively results in a total 120 kW boost but for a longer than normal time (15 kW trick plus 105 kW normal = 120 kW apparent total). This gives close to optimal speed while totally obfuscating what is really going on.
The point is that they only have the two sensors. The question is how do they know that energy follows the path KCU > ES and not one of the unlimited routes. If they can’t then the two limits 2MJ and 4MJ are worthless and as you say they could simply send the flow via the HCU.
Example of “burning fuel to harvest” was given yesterday in FP1 by Vandoorne braking (which is when ERS-K is triggered into harvesting) while still on throttle (under power) but it backfired on him “braking a bit too hard” which triggered/kicked-in his brake-by-wire throttle fail safe system and ended up with/into an anti-stall situation.gruntguru wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 08:12Not saying that anyone can or does but a few ways to put send more energy to the ES:siskue2005 wrote: ↑27 Jul 2018, 13:25As this is technical forum....please give technical details of how free load mode and full delpoyment of energy can be done on every single lap of the race?
1. Burn fuel to motor the K up to the full 2 MJ limit.
2. Burn fuel to motor the K and send it down the rumoured K>H>ES path
3. Burn fuel with an inefficient tune that generates a lot of exhaust heat then harvest that with the K.
You were lambasted because you steadfastly refuse to accept that you were wrong despite it being abundantly clear in technical regulations. You were voted down so much because you preach highly simplified Mercedes marketing material as gospel, while also spamming this thread with complete and utter nonsense. Furthermore your inability or refusal to use the post edit button and instead persistent multiple posts in a row is both highly irritating and against forum etiquette across all forums and of all of time on the internet.saviour stivala wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 10:04What are they supposed to be the "trick" or “obfuscating in all this?. When I tried to explain the possibilities of ERS-K deployment allowed by the rules I was opposed/lambasted and voted down. I explained how some may choose to deploy for the full lap senza braking and lifting times and still be within the ERS-K deployment times. Some of ERS-K deployment examples time/power I gave: 120KW for 33.33 seconds per lap. 60KW for 66.66 seconds per lap. 40KW for 99.99 seconds per lap. 30KW for 133.32 seconds per lap or any combination of power and time that falls within what is permitted. I also gave link to Andy Cowell of Mercedes explaining all this.
Could this be the upgrade that was rumored for quite some time now?Spec 3 PU has an upgraded cylinder head, new combustion chambers and increased TC performance, in addition to more aggressive mapping.
It would be legal, and you can do it if you have a more efficient combustion process.AJI wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 06:26Would this be legal, and wouldn't the net result ultimately be less total power, what with neither system being 100% efficient?godlameroso wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 05:01...An engine driven ancillary delivering 15hp to the K at all times...
Perhaps you could use that power transfer to improve drivability, but they'd have to carry more fuel.