An alternator can be used to directly drive the MGU-H. The rules only put a limit on mechanical connections to the H.AJI wrote: ↑31 Aug 2018, 02:57Hey, that's what I love about this site. None of us 100% know what's going on, but there are plenty of very insightful educated guesses.
I'm all for a 'creative interpretation' of the rules, and I dare say using the alternator as a tricky second K was explored pre the PU era, but I can't see any reason to pursue it now, mainly because I don't think they have one. Just my opinion of course, and as I said, I'm happy to be proven wrong...
Air duct, likely connecting to the similarly sized hole beneath the role hoop.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑08 Sep 2018, 12:18Quite a cool picture posted by MtthsMlw in the Force India thread, which I thought was good to share in this thread as well. What is the carbon pipe from the gearbox towards the air box? Is it for venting / cooling? It is not a structural stud is it? I suppose the white part is flexible to make sure it is not cracking under deformation?
There are similarly sized ducts on the opposite side (above the camshaft cover), routed to different locations:
The black pipe looks as though it directs cooling air to the wastegate actuators sat on top of the turbine scroll.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑08 Sep 2018, 12:18Quite a cool picture posted by MtthsMlw in the Force India thread, which I thought was good to share in this thread as well. What is the carbon pipe from the gearbox towards the air box? Is it for venting / cooling? It is not a structural stud is it? I suppose the white part is flexible to make sure it is not cracking under deformation?
In this case I believe it depends upon other hardware in the area. The RW support type, the desired shape of bodywork around the pipe. I think in this case it is the latter, the W08 has an up-down kink in that area which remains circular in cross-section. The VJM09 pipe flattens to oval before resuming to circular; my guess is they don't want a bulge in the engine cover like Merc do on the W08, considering the transmission and the RW support base are shared items.
I think you’re right about the influence of other hardware. Looking again it looks as though the exhaust is shaped to clear the wishbone connection on top of the gearbox and the bodywork above.roon wrote: ↑09 Sep 2018, 23:22In this case I believe it depends upon other hardware in the area. The RW support type, the desired shape of bodywork around the pipe. I think in this case it is the latter, the W08 has an up-down kink in that area which remains circular in cross-section. The VJM09 pipe flattens to oval before resuming to circular; my guess is they don't want a bulge in the engine cover like Merc do on the W08, considering the transmission and the RW support base are shared items.
You sir have a keen eye.henry wrote: ↑09 Sep 2018, 10:00The black pipe looks as though it directs cooling air to the wastegate actuators sat on top of the turbine scroll.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑08 Sep 2018, 12:18Quite a cool picture posted by MtthsMlw in the Force India thread, which I thought was good to share in this thread as well. What is the carbon pipe from the gearbox towards the air box? Is it for venting / cooling? It is not a structural stud is it? I suppose the white part is flexible to make sure it is not cracking under deformation?
You are right - the drivers do have a button for marking various events in the ATLAS data (I suspect this is the telemetry software most if not all of the teams use). This is all available in real time to race engineers.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑27 Oct 2018, 17:12The driver can tag points on the track by pressing a button and the engineers can review it in the log after the race - or at least this is what I believed over the years...
Yep, would tend to agree.