These engines have to be a fair bit more robust than the NA engines which had 1/4 of the cylinder pressures these engines have to deal with.SectorOne wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 19:47Sources on that?godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 14:39There is a lower weight and COG limit, and getting there is stupidly difficult. So difficult, that all 4 manufacturers are overweight, and over COG limit.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 07:10Weight and CoG of the PU'S is standardized by the regulations. The Honda pu is no lighter or heavier than it's competition(they are ballasted). The weight of the carbon fiber airboxes above the PU is negligible, it's volume is of much more importance, although less so since the rear wing has been raised. Please stop arguing about nonsense.
The RB15 looks good, but will only go as far as Honda pu reliability(combined with Newey's uncompromising packaging) will allow. They are already planning on taking at least 4 pus this season, if not 5.
I know back in the V8 days getting to the weight limit was very easy.
So easy BMW claimed they could make the engine weigh as little as 69kg as opposed to the mandated minimum 95kg.
http://sd-2.archive-host.com/membres/up ... BMW_F1.pdf
Absolutely, but i´d like to see the sources if possible to the statement.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 19:52These engines have to be a fair bit more robust than the NA engines which had 1/4 of the cylinder pressures these engines have to deal with.SectorOne wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 19:47Sources on that?godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 14:39
There is a lower weight and COG limit, and getting there is stupidly difficult. So difficult, that all 4 manufacturers are overweight, and over COG limit.
I know back in the V8 days getting to the weight limit was very easy.
So easy BMW claimed they could make the engine weigh as little as 69kg as opposed to the mandated minimum 95kg.
http://sd-2.archive-host.com/membres/up ... BMW_F1.pdf
Red Bull decided to put more power unit components such as coolers above the engine in RB14, ot was red bulls idea not Honda.GhostF1 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 06:10The unfortunate thing here is, everything you mention regarding Honda's PU is completely devoid of genuine fact and is totally baseless. Actually sounds like Cyril is talking here.atanatizante wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 00:58That! That`s the reason they have so small sidepods air intakes! And that leads obviously to a higher CoG of the car not the engine, which is far worse, btw ...
And that`s not the weakest point in Honda`s PU armour. Maybe this year they reached almost the same max. power output both in the race and in qualy but certainly they are behind Ferrari and Merc in combustion efficiency hence requires more fuel than both ICE`s above mentioned.
With 2 tenths per lap gain for every 5kg of fuel - as Andy Cowell said - this means Merc acknowledged that the gain Ferrari`s ICE was doing last year was mainly due to a better fuel combustion process (coming out from an exclusive technology provided by Mahle and a renowned scientist, had I`m not wrong) and acted this year accordingly ...
This high fuel consumption statement... where are you getting this from? And wherever it was, I'm hoping you confirmed it was fact.. I don't recall this being a particular issue at all last year? Not comparatively to Renault anyway.
Honda have also only ever run a cooling package that relies on sidepod radiators since they re-entered F1, IF the radiators are 100% stacked above the PU this year as we are theorising, it is an entirely new design that was decided on with RBR, so I would only assume they have found some benefit in doing it this way, so not sure why that's indicative of a "chink in Honda's armour"? Maybe we should cross examine with the STR14, as last year they used a twin rad setup in both sidepods.
Every team these days puts radiators in that area. Aero is more important than the CoG.atanatizante wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 00:58That! That`s the reason they have so small sidepods air intakes! And that leads obviously to a higher CoG of the car not the engine, which is far worse, btw ...
It's not a weak pointAnd that`s not the weakest point in Honda`s PU armour.
"The weight of the carbon fiber airboxes above the PU is negligible" this statement is entirely incorrect. Teams put a lot of R and D into making the roll hoop as light as possible. The reason is that the roll hoop contains the roll over crash protection. There is a lot of carbon fibre up there to create the strength needed.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 07:10Weight and CoG of the PU'S is standardized by the regulations. The Honda pu is no lighter or heavier than it's competition(they are ballasted). The weight of the carbon fiber airboxes above the PU is negligible, it's volume is of much more importance, although less so since the rear wing has been raised. Please stop arguing about nonsense.
The RB15 looks good, but will only go as far as Honda pu reliability(combined with Newey's uncompromising packaging) will allow. They are already planning on taking at least 4 pus this season, if not 5.
Obviously they didn't do that on accident. May be that the aerodynamic gains are far greater than the losses because of the minor COG increase of a top mounted radiator.atanatizante wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 00:58That! That`s the reason they have so small sidepods air intakes! And that leads obviously to a higher CoG of the car not the engine, which is far worse, btw ...
Are you an oracle? We don't know anything certain about the PUs apart from the sound they make.atanatizante wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 00:58And that`s not the weakest point in Honda`s PU armour. Maybe this year they reached almost the same max. power output both in the race and in qualy but certainly they are behind Ferrari and Merc in combustion efficiency hence requires more fuel than both ICE`s above mentioned.
This doesn't even come close to even an implication much less an acknowledgement.atanatizante wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 00:58With 2 tenths per lap gain for every 5kg of fuel - as Andy Cowell said - this means Merc acknowledged that the gain Ferrari`s ICE was doing last year was mainly due to a better fuel combustion process (coming out from an exclusive technology provided by Mahle and a renowned scientist, had I`m not wrong) and acted this year accordingly ...
Jeez... Feels like excessive overregulation... What's the point of all these restrictions? Destroying variety? 5.4.1 would have been enough. I'm surprised they didn't prescribe the screws that may be used to attach stuff...dren wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 14:255.4.1 The overall weight of the power unit must be a minimum of 145kg.
5.4.2 The centre of gravity of the power unit may not lie less than 200mm above the reference plane.
5.4.4 The weight of a piston (with piston-pin, piston-pin retainers and piston rings) may not be less than 300g.
5.4.5 The weight of a connecting rod (with fasteners, small and big end bearings) may not be less than 300g.
5.4.6 The weight of the complete crankshaft assembly between the mid positions of the front and rear main bearing journals (including balance masses, bolts, bungs, O-rings between the boundaries), may not be less than 5300g. See drawing 8.
So assuming you meet all these stipulations, and you're still under weight, you could use ballast to get to the lowest allowed CoG if not already there.
Not sure if you're being sarcastic, but M12 bolts must be used to secure the PU to the chassis at prescribed points.mzso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 22:27Jeez... Such overregulation... What's the point of all these restrictions? Destroying variety? 5.4.1 would have been enough. I'm surprised they didn't prescribe the screws that may be used to attach stuff...dren wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 14:255.4.1 The overall weight of the power unit must be a minimum of 145kg.
5.4.2 The centre of gravity of the power unit may not lie less than 200mm above the reference plane.
5.4.4 The weight of a piston (with piston-pin, piston-pin retainers and piston rings) may not be less than 300g.
5.4.5 The weight of a connecting rod (with fasteners, small and big end bearings) may not be less than 300g.
5.4.6 The weight of the complete crankshaft assembly between the mid positions of the front and rear main bearing journals (including balance masses, bolts, bungs, O-rings between the boundaries), may not be less than 5300g. See drawing 8.
So assuming you meet all these stipulations, and you're still under weight, you could use ballast to get to the lowest allowed CoG if not already there.
The regulations are just numbers to us and the reality of just how difficult it is to manufacture reliable parts that light, is a monumental challenge in itself. A 5.3 KG crank is already insanely light. The bare factory forged crank out of an S2k weighs ~22kg.mzso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 22:27Jeez... Feels like excessive overregulation... What's the point of all these restrictions? Destroying variety? 5.4.1 would have been enough. I'm surprised they didn't prescribe the screws that may be used to attach stuff...dren wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 14:255.4.1 The overall weight of the power unit must be a minimum of 145kg.
5.4.2 The centre of gravity of the power unit may not lie less than 200mm above the reference plane.
5.4.4 The weight of a piston (with piston-pin, piston-pin retainers and piston rings) may not be less than 300g.
5.4.5 The weight of a connecting rod (with fasteners, small and big end bearings) may not be less than 300g.
5.4.6 The weight of the complete crankshaft assembly between the mid positions of the front and rear main bearing journals (including balance masses, bolts, bungs, O-rings between the boundaries), may not be less than 5300g. See drawing 8.
So assuming you meet all these stipulations, and you're still under weight, you could use ballast to get to the lowest allowed CoG if not already there.
Yea that's crazy light. A stock crank from a Honda 600cc CBR sportbike is 6.2 kg. Tiny engine with cyl pressures that are a tiny fraction of current F1. So why the 5.3 kg lower limit as opposed to 5.2 or 5.4?godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2019, 23:11
The regulations are just numbers to us and the reality of just how difficult it is to manufacture reliable parts that light, is a monumental challenge in itself. A 5.3 KG crank is already insanely light. The bare factory forged crank out of an S2k weighs ~22kg.
I don't know any specific numbers, however I've been told no one is at the weight or COG limit, but they're getting closer.
Somone(s) determined that was a realistic minimum weight to keep costs under control. The lighter you allow a component to be, the more money teams will throw at R&D to get down to the minimum.