Welcome to the world of marketing.Zynerji wrote: ↑06 Aug 2018, 04:45See, those are the rules that make no sense... Why make a road relevant hybrid formula, then place such idiotic restrictions on the very items that manufacturers want to develop for their road cars?
Yes, that's a cost sink. Yes, the manufacturers understand that. Yes, that is the most important part of improving future, road going hybrids...
At this point, the only thing they are really developing is software.
The manufacturers want to include the word “hybrid” in their marketing material. They want to say they are recovering energy that would otherwise be wasted. As long as they can say those things it doesn’t matter what the details are. After all there’s a limited proportion of the general public that has understanding to go beyond the fact that the engine has an electric motor that uses waste energy.
The duty cycle of an F1 power train is worlds apart from that of a road going version. It’s designed to operate at maximum output for 60,70,80% of its life while a road going engine is instead operating at, 10,20,30%.
Having said that these current units are at research level in at least the area of combustion, and perhaps some others. This may feed forward into roadgoing vehicles, who knows. Certainly not many outside of the teams.
It’s unlikely that all they are developing is software. But again the developments they are making are far from the eyes of the general public, and even if they weren’t there’s a very small proportion of the general public that would recognise the words to describe what they are doing let alone the processes involved. And, IMHO, software is what propels all these things forward, whether it is in design, analysis or configuration and processing the actual running systems. This is true of all the world around us, it’s relevant.
And finally the rules themselves. They are arbitrary, defined to reach a certain performance threshold and not provide opportunities for significant variety so as to assure low performance differentials.
They failed there. I personally think for 2 reasons. Firstly, it’s research level stuff and one team had better insights which were not in the public domain. Secondly, all teams optimise their performance, through understanding and the use of software to encode that understanding, so differences, although small, are fully exploited.