Maplesoup wrote: ↑05 Mar 2019, 14:24
godlameroso wrote: ↑05 Mar 2019, 13:47
Honda is still behind, maybe not apparent over one lap, maybe not so much on this track. Nevertheless they are behind especially over a race distance. As efficiency improves, so will the race pace. Efficiency is the hardest thing to engineer besides reliability, the two big question marks for Honda this year. If they want to win they need big strides in these areas.
Unfortunately we can't prove if they are behind (behind who?) over one lap or over a race distance.
We'll only find out in Melbourne where they are within the field.
"As efficiency improves, so will the race pace" do you have any actual source material to prove this?
I don't thing we really know exactly how efficient any of the engines are, plus their efficiency will change race to race. Temperature, engine mapping, tyres, track surface are all going to play a part in the cars overall efficiency.
Logic dictates that given a fixed fuel amount and rate, that improving efficiency improves power. Efficiency also improves ERS endurance because more engine power means more energy can be sent to the ES. If you improve fuel economy 1% that efficiency gain can improve ERS harvesting by letting you burn more fuel. By sending energy from K to H then to ES teams have an unlimited method of converting crank power to electrical energy. Thus the ers can be charged through braking, by throttling the turbo, or by loading the crank(and reducing power similar to a supercharger belt).
Without efficiency, you have to fuel save, your ERS recovery suffers as well(less speed on straights, less boost pressure to harvest), and because of this less fuel is available for charging the ES via the crank to K to H path.
To recap, more efficiency means more power, which means more braking at end of straights which increases K harvesting. More efficiency means more power and at the same time more turbine energy to harvest. Finally more efficiency lets you burn more fuel, which means you can sacrifice more fuel to harvest via the K -> H -> ES route.
Improving fuel, turbine, and ers efficiency may not unlock huge power directly, but does unlock it over a race distance. Remeber that the most powerful engine mode requires the ES to fully supply the MGU-K and MGU-H, so increasing the ability to harvest energy lets you use full power modes for longer.
Do you have any source material that shows fuel inefficiency is an asset in this formula?