Drag squares with speed, so traditionally the most efficient way to decrease lap times is use your available energy in the slow parts of the track to get you up to speed as quickly as possible.Big Tea wrote:Would it not be the most benefit to have the highest speed for longest, as it covers the most ground is shortest time?henry wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 14:56That would certainly seem to be a useful approach.hollus wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 13:27Could it be extra acceleration be as simple as deploying in the middle of the long straights, hence "reaching top speed" earlier, but then harvesting from the H at the end of the same long straight, even when at full throttle?
Say you tell the system that the H is to add 50 hp to the ES every time you are above 300km/h (and maybe say unless the third paddle is pressed?). You are effectively robbing the engine of power near top speed, but a 5% reduction in power near top speed is only a change from, say, 320km/h terminal speed to 314.4km/h.
Surely the time gained reaching 300 outweights the losses for the while over 300, while the extra harvest can be put to good use in deploying for longer in future straights?
Hmmm... not 100% sure this is making sense, I might have confused myself there.
The most likely extra power would come from extending the period that electric-supercharger mode is deployed. If,say, they could deploy from 250kph to 300 and others couldn’t it might require about 250kJ extra from the ES. From 300 on the 120kW minus whatever the MGU-H is making, then when you come to harvest it also relies on what the H can make.
So if you can make more from the H you can deploy the electric supercharger mode longer, get to speed quicker and sacrifice a little top speed to recharge the ES.
As an example if you can make 80kW from the H instead of 60kW. After 300 kph you could run 4 seconds at self sustain plus then 2 at ICE only, harvesting from the H. You would get an extra 120kJ plus you’d have higher part throttle charging and, perhaps, higher blowdown and so lower discharge rate during electric-supercharge. So not far from being able to deploy from 250 to 300.
Losing a second last thing before brake would loose more than a second while exiting the previous corner (or not?)
The higher your speed, the energy requirements to go faster increase exponentially.
However, is this still the best way to decrease lap time in F1's current technology and regulations? I don't know, that's why I listen and read twice as much as much as I speak. Advice I'd encourage a certain member here to take up.
Back on topic, did anyone find the specific regulation regarding each car having a 'single ES'?
Sent from my SM-G950F using Tapatalk