A policy statement is not a regulation. There is a policy that aerodynamic surfaces should not flex, but they do.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 09:07On this here technical discussion forum I have expressed my personal opinion on the “K” deployment/harvesting function. Am I allowed to do that? It is not like I expressed my opinion as “WE”, it is only my personal opinion.
Reasons as to my personal opinion about the subject at hand: policy of statement of intent and its implementation as a procedure of protocol. “The MGU-K (where the “K” stands for kinetic) converting kinetic energy generated under braking into electricity (rather than it escaping as heat”. In my personal opinion any energy harvested other than by using the brake pedal goes against the above declared policy of statement of intent. Also my opinion, power unit mapping is track dependent and is optimized for given track to minimize lap time, the MGU-K two functions (harvesting and deployment) is mapped into the two driver’s pedals (brake and accelerator pedals). It is these two pedals that triggers both deployment and harvesting, the MGU-K can be used as a generator only while braking.
the engineers had chosen to have the deployment under the control of an 'imperfect' human being using a stick on the end of a pivot, the accelerator pedal, when they could have it done by 100% repeatable piece of gode, why not with the brake pedalfor harvesting?henry wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 11:44A policy statement is not a regulation. There is a policy that aerodynamic surfaces should not flex, but they do.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 09:07On this here technical discussion forum I have expressed my personal opinion on the “K” deployment/harvesting function. Am I allowed to do that? It is not like I expressed my opinion as “WE”, it is only my personal opinion.
Reasons as to my personal opinion about the subject at hand: policy of statement of intent and its implementation as a procedure of protocol. “The MGU-K (where the “K” stands for kinetic) converting kinetic energy generated under braking into electricity (rather than it escaping as heat”. In my personal opinion any energy harvested other than by using the brake pedal goes against the above declared policy of statement of intent. Also my opinion, power unit mapping is track dependent and is optimized for given track to minimize lap time, the MGU-K two functions (harvesting and deployment) is mapped into the two driver’s pedals (brake and accelerator pedals). It is these two pedals that triggers both deployment and harvesting, the MGU-K can be used as a generator only while braking.
Two questions:
Do you think an engineer would choose to have the harvesting under the control of an imperfect human being using a stick on the end of a pivot, the brake pedal, when they could have it done by a 100% repeatable piece of code? (There is no regulation that requires one or bans the other)
Why does the rain light flash at the end of some straights?
Well, that's not exactly what they found.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 10:30"the failsafe system is the system that was out of order and so not functioning on Jules B Marussia in Japan" "I have heard nothing of this, but are you suggesting that this was a contributing factor in JB's death?". refer to: FIA ten men expert accident panel findings 03-12-2014.
Perhaps the engineers should add a third pedal for the MGUH? The driver could initiate the extra harvest mode the Honda PU uses by quickly pumping the brake and MGUH pedal back and forth. They could bring back a lever on the steering wheel for spark advance, too. No sense in letting the ICE mapping do that.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 12:12the engineers had chosen to have the deployment under the control of an 'imperfect' human being using a stick on the end of a pivot, the accelerator pedal, when they could have it done by 100% repeatable piece of gode, why not with the brake pedalfor harvesting?
the engineers had chosen to add a button for the 'H' instead of a third pedal and in so doing avoided the need for pumping said pedal, this for deployment, for harvesting and control of turbo speed the 'H' is mapped into the power unit turbo control system. something that there is no way the driver can control.dren wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 12:44Perhaps the engineers should add a third pedal for the MGUH? The driver could initiate the extra harvest mode the Honda PU uses by quickly pumping the brake and MGUH pedal back and forth. They could bring back a lever on the steering wheel for spark advance, too. No sense in letting the ICE mapping do that.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 12:12the engineers had chosen to have the deployment under the control of an 'imperfect' human being using a stick on the end of a pivot, the accelerator pedal, when they could have it done by 100% repeatable piece of gode, why not with the brake pedalfor harvesting?
Yes, it goes against the statement of intent. However, F1 regulatory authority does not originate from intent. It originates from the written regulations in the fia pdf files, and their technical directives. We have to clearly distinct intent and reality from one another, especially in such a competitive environment where intent is usually stepped on in favour of a competitive advantage.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 09:07On this here technical discussion forum I have expressed my personal opinion on the “K” deployment/harvesting function. Am I allowed to do that? It is not like I expressed my opinion as “WE”, it is only my personal opinion.
Reasons as to my personal opinion about the subject at hand: policy of statement of intent and its implementation as a procedure of protocol. “The MGU-K (where the “K” stands for kinetic) converting kinetic energy generated under braking into electricity (rather than it escaping as heat”. In my personal opinion any energy harvested other than by using the brake pedal goes against the above declared policy of statement of intent. Also my opinion, power unit mapping is track dependent and is optimized for given track to minimize lap time, the MGU-K two functions (harvesting and deployment) is mapped into the two driver’s pedals (brake and accelerator pedals). It is these two pedals that triggers both deployment and harvesting, the MGU-K can be used as a generator only while braking.
Vandoorne Hungary free practice driver to pit/pit to driver radio: “I have no deployment, no power” “do not press the brakes to hard under throttle” his rear brake-by-wire failsafe system was triggered and the engine was cut, this while he was trying to get some extra harvesting.
Jules Bianchi: for detail about the contribution of the Marussia failed rear brake-by-wire failsafe system to the accident refer to FIA panel of experts report findings of 03/12/14.
That's only true if DRS is open though. Usually that is accompagnied with overtaking or full attack modes. I think using to brake pedal on the straights can be effective in lift and coast operations.subcritical71 wrote:Here is why I’m skeptical on the driver needing to press the brake pedal to get K to generate. Say they have the DRS open and get to the point where they have attained their top speed (either physically or by their rnerfy strategy) and now want to generate with the K. If they then have to push the brake to do this the DRS wing returns to its normal position. I would think a better way to do the K strategy is via track position vs speed vs brake position and not relying on driver input for normal usage scenarios. If they want to give the driver an override mode that would also make sense, be it a push button or similar.
only blatantly ever since the late 1950s
I would agree that is can be accompanied by overtaking or full attack mode, but this is where I would implement an OT button to override the feature that would be for ~80% of its usage. For normal usage I would make it automated that at a certain speed to no longer motor the MGU-K and instead generate. I've seen it done numerous times at the end of a long straight where you see before the braking zone a slight reduction in speed and also the rain light flash. If you need the speed to complete the overtake then hit the OT. This makes sense because motoring the MGU-K at 330kph brings a smaller gain than doing it out of the next corner.turbof1 wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 13:09That's only true if DRS is open though. Usually that is accompagnied with overtaking or full attack modes. I think using to brake pedal on the straights can be effective in lift and coast operations.subcritical71 wrote:Here is why I’m skeptical on the driver needing to press the brake pedal to get K to generate. Say they have the DRS open and get to the point where they have attained their top speed (either physically or by their rnerfy strategy) and now want to generate with the K. If they then have to push the brake to do this the DRS wing returns to its normal position. I would think a better way to do the K strategy is via track position vs speed vs brake position and not relying on driver input for normal usage scenarios. If they want to give the driver an override mode that would also make sense, be it a push button or similar.
Except that code would violate the current technical regulations (section 5.5) in the case of the accelerator pedal.saviour stivala wrote: ↑21 Sep 2018, 12:12the engineers had chosen to have the deployment under the control of an 'imperfect' human being using a stick on the end of a pivot, the accelerator pedal, when they could have it done by 100% repeatable piece of gode, why not with the brake pedalfor harvesting?