dfegan358 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2019, 15:14
What part of power unit would manufacturers deem to hold most potential for gains? I presume the battery/energy recovery and deployment has more potential gains as it’s relatively newer technology!
I am a novice when it comes to F1 power units and engines in general.
It's just a bunch of tiny improvements over the whole power unit. Big gains came from using steel pistons as it allowed more knock, which allowed them to push the tuning. Engineering fewer losses from the AC/DC conversion, the way the MGU-H/K and control electronics talk to each other are another source of incremental gains. Removing inefficiency of the engine, for example redesigning the water pump for fewer parasitic losses, or the lubrication system(scavenge pumps, oil tanks, oil cooling), bumping up compression, developing more stable fuel, and better lubricants. As combustion efficiency improves(with new fuel delivery, combustion chamber design, and airflow from revised intake and exhaust ports, valve timing and lift tweaks), new harvesting and deployment strategies become available.
Then there's making the power unit more compact, and lighter, improving the installation for chassis balance, or to give more space for aero.
Essentially it's 400 tiny steps that add up to 4 big ones.