subcritical71 wrote: ↑13 Oct 2018, 16:08
Dr. Acula wrote: ↑13 Oct 2018, 14:24
subcritical71 wrote: ↑13 Oct 2018, 13:54
I was not implying they changed anything, but they could design the battery and therefore have the battery homologated in this type of configuration.
Sure, but then you are stuck with only 2 specific designs. Are there only 2 specific scenarios? I don't think so. How the battery is used is very track specific. Sure, some tracks will have very similiar requirement to each other, but others don't and i don't think only 2 desings would be enough to give you an optimal solution for each track.
With 4 ES per season i think this idea could be realistic, but not with 2 ES per season.
Maybe a misunderstanding.... in a single ES I would propose 2 different cell technologies. One technology optimized for the MGU-K (+/- 120 kW) and the other technology optimized for the MGU-H. As the Saft article showed there are different Li-Ion cells available for different use scenarios (power vs energy usage).
I think it might be worth looking at the duty cycles for the ES. I think it might look like:
Discharge from highest to lowest:
Turbo anti lag. 180kW for a couple of tenths of seconds exiting slow corners all to the H
Electric Supercharge. 180kW for a few seconds a lap, more during qualifying 120 to K, 60 to H
Sustain plus mode. 60kW to the K to augment the H, applied for as much as 60 seconds a lap
Charge from highest to lowest
Coast plus plus. 180kW for a second or two at the end of straights, 120kW from the K, 60 from the H, I think Ferrari do this and Mercedes don’t.
Extra Harvest. 120kW or more from the H (Honda specific?) for a few seconds at the end of straights
Braking. 120kW from the K during the braking phase, 8 to 20 seconds depending on track
Coast plus. 60kW from the H at the end of straights, the ICE provides all the motive power
Part throttle, up to 120kW from the K. Used from 0 torque demand up to, say, 80% demand
Rather than separating by H and K, which I don’t think have independent connections to the ES, Ferrari might have their two batteries optimised for two groups of duty cycles, say 120 and above and up to say 90. Not much different from your numbers but organised on a different principle. The former could be smaller capacity and they might even move charge between them after or before the high duty cycle spikes on the track.
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