Honda said they designed in a certain amount of allowance for future power upgrades for vibration but ate all that allotment up with the spec 3 update.
Honda said they designed in a certain amount of allowance for future power upgrades for vibration but ate all that allotment up with the spec 3 update.
Well said. A KW gained in the ICE, can be sacrificed to gain 2 KW in the MGU-H, for net increase of 1KW. Having a more efficient combustion process overall gives you more leeway in order to make those sacrifices. In other words improving the ICE may not show a gain in ICE power but it shows a gain in MGU-H power. The MGU-H itself has a recovery operating window, and that window shrinks or widens based on the ICE settings. Having a less costly combustion process overall means those sacrifices can be easier to achieve technically speaking. It also makes sense as MGU-H recovery has been the main weakness of the Honda PU since its inception. As the efficiency and power have progressed, the tricks about how to get the most out of the MGU-H have started revealing themselves.Nonserviam85 wrote: ↑09 Jan 2019, 15:16And finally the truth has been spoken:
“However, just improving the combustion decreases the MGU-H recovery, so we need to balance the two. And that balance is technologically difficult. A ICE engineer might want an increase in horsepower, but that doesn’t necessarily increase the total energy recovery per lap.”
“It’s really a well thought out set of regulations.”
The reality is that a horsepower gained from the ICE is not equal to that gained from the MGU-H. On some circuits, the former might be more valuable, while at others the MGU-H might be more important. Improving both the ICE and the MGU-H—which are fundamentally at a trade-off —while finding the optimal balance of the two, is the crux of PU development."
It looks like it's in motoring mode during most upshifts and generating during downshifts/braking if I'm reading the graph right? Some spikes on upshifts.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑09 Jan 2019, 13:53though the K machine is in generation mode during upshifts to minimise its inertial impediment to slowing the PU rpm
Up is motoring, down is generation. It doesn't sit idle much. The two overlayed plots are comparing 2016 and 2017. You can see they motor a little longer at the end of the straight in 2017 with their extra harvesting giving them a bit more K motoring (blue line). The H is opposite, down is motoring, up is generating. This is a lap of Spa.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/red- ... e/4321700/Despite recent reports suggesting Honda had discovered a new vibration problem when testing its 2019 engine, it is understood that the manufacturer has not experienced a major setback although is hoping to make more progress with the development before testing begins.
I don't think they mean it this way.. It might mean where and when the power is used on the circuit...the ICE will always gain more energy than the MGUH because of thermodynamics and transfer losses. but with the MGUH and battery you can store that energy (though it is less than what it would have been in the ICE) whenever you want to for best lap time.Like a hybrid car is good in traffic, but is dead weight on the highway.godlameroso wrote: ↑09 Jan 2019, 16:46Well said. A KW gained in the ICE, can be sacrificed to gain 2 KW in the MGU-H, for net increase of 1KW.Nonserviam85 wrote: ↑09 Jan 2019, 15:16And finally the truth has been spoken:
“However, just improving the combustion decreases the MGU-H recovery, so we need to balance the two. And that balance is technologically difficult. A ICE engineer might want an increase in horsepower, but that doesn’t necessarily increase the total energy recovery per lap.”
“It’s really a well thought out set of regulations.”
The reality is that a horsepower gained from the ICE is not equal to that gained from the MGU-H. On some circuits, the former might be more valuable, while at others the MGU-H might be more important. Improving both the ICE and the MGU-H—which are fundamentally at a trade-off —while finding the optimal balance of the two, is the crux of PU development."