rscsr wrote: ↑01 Sep 2018, 13:53
Dr. Acula wrote: ↑01 Sep 2018, 13:35
ringo wrote: ↑01 Sep 2018, 03:57
I am more leaning towards Ferrari has a disgustingly powerful combustion process that is so damaging to engine life that they only use it when necessary. If there are limits on compression ratio, they are probably very close to it.
The rules limit the compression ration to 18:1 which is insanely high already for a natural aspirated petrol engine, let alone a heavely turbo charged one.
...
But not exceptionally high for a direct injection engine. Most Diesel engines are using in excess of 18:1. Of course you can get away with such a high compression when the fuel burns slower, hence limiting the temperatures. And it is also well known that higher compression improves efficiency. Even the old V8 in F1 used compression ratios of about 16:1 (only limited due to the short stroke used)
That doesn't matter much. Did we see a significant jump in compression ratio when direct injection was introduced in petrol roadcar engines? No we didn't. Comparing Diesel and Petrol is like comparing Apple and Oranges.
The rules in F1 doesn't allow HCCI. That's why they run a TJI setup. But even with TJI, the fuel needs time to mix properly with the air in the cylinder otherwise it will not burn down properly and basically you would waste fuel, something you have to prevent under the current regulations.
This means you have to start to inject fuel quite early, long before the piston reaches TDC.
The thing that allows this high compression ratios in F1 is actually the fact that the overall mixture in the cylinder in very very lean.
Actually this is also a problem in direct injected petrol road cars under partial load. Because the cylinder aren't filled that well with air under partial load, the fuel has problems to mix properly and this creates a lot of particulate matter if burned. What they do in road cars now is actually to add a port injection system which only injects fuel under partial load and alows a cleaner combustion this way.