Wow merc engine and transmission is working seamlessly on downshift and they can hit trottle very early, no wonder Marko hits out at RBHino wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 04:35Telemetry comparison between top qualifiers in Australia.
https://unendinginsight.wordpress.com/2 ... -analysis/
https://unendinginsight.files.wordpress ... vs_ver.png
Immediately evident is the strong straightline speeds by the Red Bull with it’s new Honda PU, a sign that Honda has made some good progress. However, it’s likely that the Red Bull was running less downforce to help with this straightline speed as it is much slower in the high speed T11-12/T15, and may also explain why Verstappen brakes earlier than Hamilton multiple times. The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do.
Unlike the Ferrari, and perhaps with less downforce, the Red Bull doesn’t need to brake for T4 and T14, though it is difficult to determine whether this is driver style or car characteristic dependent. Relative to Mercedes the Red Bull remains close in slow corners and perhaps gets closer even near the end of the lap, possibly a sign that it keeps its tyres in good condition throughout the lap.
Very interesting post. Lots of time lost under braking. Driver? Aero? Chassis?Hino wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 04:35Telemetry comparison between top qualifiers in Australia.
https://unendinginsight.wordpress.com/2 ... -analysis/
https://unendinginsight.files.wordpress ... vs_ver.png
Immediately evident is the strong straightline speeds by the Red Bull with it’s new Honda PU, a sign that Honda has made some good progress. However, it’s likely that the Red Bull was running less downforce to help with this straightline speed as it is much slower in the high speed T11-12/T15, and may also explain why Verstappen brakes earlier than Hamilton multiple times. The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do.
Unlike the Ferrari, and perhaps with less downforce, the Red Bull doesn’t need to brake for T4 and T14, though it is difficult to determine whether this is driver style or car characteristic dependent. Relative to Mercedes the Red Bull remains close in slow corners and perhaps gets closer even near the end of the lap, possibly a sign that it keeps its tyres in good condition throughout the lap.
Excellent Post.henry wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 10:47Very interesting post. Lots of time lost under braking. Driver? Aero? Chassis?Hino wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 04:35Telemetry comparison between top qualifiers in Australia.
https://unendinginsight.wordpress.com/2 ... -analysis/
https://unendinginsight.files.wordpress ... vs_ver.png
Immediately evident is the strong straightline speeds by the Red Bull with it’s new Honda PU, a sign that Honda has made some good progress. However, it’s likely that the Red Bull was running less downforce to help with this straightline speed as it is much slower in the high speed T11-12/T15, and may also explain why Verstappen brakes earlier than Hamilton multiple times. The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do.
Unlike the Ferrari, and perhaps with less downforce, the Red Bull doesn’t need to brake for T4 and T14, though it is difficult to determine whether this is driver style or car characteristic dependent. Relative to Mercedes the Red Bull remains close in slow corners and perhaps gets closer even near the end of the lap, possibly a sign that it keeps its tyres in good condition throughout the lap.
I think the statement “The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do“ is the exact opposite of how things are. If Honda can make power at lower RPM that’s good not bad. More revs good is not the way to go with these PU. IMHO.
Charts and all that is great, but anything regarding RPM in that analysis is flawed and should not be taken seriously, as it the whole thing about tyre saving trouhgout the lap. All it matters is you keep the engine in the operating window of max fuel flow (10.5k+ rpm), everything else is arguing semantics really. 6 years running now and still people cling onto the old NA engines philosophy of more RPM is always better. Even then rpm weren't be all and end all, 2006 20k cosworth anybody?henry wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 10:47Very interesting post. Lots of time lost under braking. Driver? Aero? Chassis?Hino wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 04:35Telemetry comparison between top qualifiers in Australia.
https://unendinginsight.wordpress.com/2 ... -analysis/
https://unendinginsight.files.wordpress ... vs_ver.png
Immediately evident is the strong straightline speeds by the Red Bull with it’s new Honda PU, a sign that Honda has made some good progress. However, it’s likely that the Red Bull was running less downforce to help with this straightline speed as it is much slower in the high speed T11-12/T15, and may also explain why Verstappen brakes earlier than Hamilton multiple times. The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do.
Unlike the Ferrari, and perhaps with less downforce, the Red Bull doesn’t need to brake for T4 and T14, though it is difficult to determine whether this is driver style or car characteristic dependent. Relative to Mercedes the Red Bull remains close in slow corners and perhaps gets closer even near the end of the lap, possibly a sign that it keeps its tyres in good condition throughout the lap.
I think the statement “The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do“ is the exact opposite of how things are. If Honda can make power at lower RPM that’s good not bad. More revs good is not the way to go with these PU. IMHO.
Yup, and we can remember the sausage-turboed 615 & 616 has hit 12.500 - 12.800 all the time.henry wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 10:47
Very interesting post. Lots of time lost under braking. Driver? Aero? Chassis?
I think the statement “The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do“ is the exact opposite of how things are. If Honda can make power at lower RPM that’s good not bad. More revs good is not the way to go with these PU. IMHO.
Agreed, the Merc Engine seems to rev 'freer' a bit like on a road car engine which has done 5K miles vs one that's loosened up and done about 50K, the revs dying a bit quicker when the throttle is off. Not sure what the engine is doing to achieve this, the normal scavenging process must be more efficient on the MERC. Hats off again to the Merc guys...subcritical71 wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 15:17Also notice that both engines RPM increase momentarily (blips) while off throttle and no throttle input. Not as pronounced as what I would have expected but the resolution of the data is also not that high.
https://i.imgur.com/VKjYF6i.png
Well, I didn't seem to look at my own graphic enough... that is the downshift blipPowerandtheGlory wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 15:29Agreed, the Merc Engine seems to rev 'freer' a bit like on a road car engine which has done 5K miles vs one that's loosened up and done about 50K, the revs dying a bit quicker when the throttle is off. Not sure what the engine is doing to achieve this, the normal scavenging process must be more efficient on the MERC. Hats off again to the Merc guys...subcritical71 wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 15:17Also notice that both engines RPM increase momentarily (blips) while off throttle and no throttle input. Not as pronounced as what I would have expected but the resolution of the data is also not that high.
https://i.imgur.com/VKjYF6i.png
There is a direct correlation between RPM and horsepower... NA engines will produce more Horsepower at higher RPM.Juzh wrote:Charts and all that is great, but anything regarding RPM in that analysis is flawed and should not be taken seriously, as it the whole thing about tyre saving trouhgout the lap. All it matters is you keep the engine in the operating window of max fuel flow (10.5k+ rpm), everything else is arguing semantics really. 6 years running now and still people cling onto the old NA engines philosophy of more RPM is always better. Even then rpm weren't be all and end all, 2006 20k cosworth anybody?henry wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 10:47Very interesting post. Lots of time lost under braking. Driver? Aero? Chassis?Hino wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 04:35Telemetry comparison between top qualifiers in Australia.
https://unendinginsight.wordpress.com/2 ... -analysis/
https://unendinginsight.files.wordpress ... vs_ver.png
I think the statement “The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do“ is the exact opposite of how things are. If Honda can make power at lower RPM that’s good not bad. More revs good is not the way to go with these PU. IMHO.
As for the time lost under braking, it makes sense you have to brake earlier when you're down of DF levels, it's just the way it it goes. mercedes was simply the best car in melbourne and it wasn't even close, not even with red bull.
I also think that, while honda did make signifficant progress one way or another, red bull and in particular TR cutting down on DF flattered them on the straights to a degree on that track. RB basically made a 180 U turn, they went from absolutely being the best in high speed section T11-12 last year, to now being behind merc, ferrari, haas maybe even alfa romeo. Yes, other aspects of their chassis still made them far superior compared to most of those cars, but in terms of pure aero performance they were far down from what is ussually the case.
In Australia the Honda sounded like an F note, the Merc sounded like an A note, with noticeably higher revs. Honda will need to tweak their system to more closely emulate what Merc are doing, which is probably using the extra fuel allowance to run slightly higher rpms for the benefit of the turbo and ers systems to generate more all the time. Honda is looking after efficiency and probably not yet fully tapping into the extra fuel potential.PowerandtheGlory wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 14:33Excellent Post with the telemetry. The Merc engine noticeably 'rev'ier' than the Honda. But most interesting is how Hamilton seems to be able to keep the throttle half open in T11, T14 and T15-16 which in turn sees the Merc engine Rev earlier and freer in the straights that follow which increases the KPH figure across that section of the track. Very Senna-Esque who used to famously 'stab' the accelerator mid corner in the old turbo days to keep the turbine spinning. Not sure the newer turbo need that sort of thing, but hamilton is effectively on throttle more of the time. And the RB loses Time Delta throughout the whole lap after T1.. def down on Aero as the RB doesn't make any 'real' gains rest of the lap.
No anything about the RPM chart is not flawed just because. More RPM produces more gass volume which might be beneficial for the MGU-h. What if they run the turbine with more wastegate to reduce backpressure because that will produce more crankshaft output and compensate the loss of regeneration somewhat with some more RPM. We don't know any of this so let's not get all macho over what is semantic and what isn't.Juzh wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 13:57Charts and all that is great, but anything regarding RPM in that analysis is flawed and should not be taken seriously, as it the whole thing about tyre saving trouhgout the lap. All it matters is you keep the engine in the operating window of max fuel flow (10.5k+ rpm), everything else is arguing semantics really. 6 years running now and still people cling onto the old NA engines philosophy of more RPM is always better. Even then rpm weren't be all and end all, 2006 20k cosworth anybody?henry wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 10:47Very interesting post. Lots of time lost under braking. Driver? Aero? Chassis?Hino wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 04:35Telemetry comparison between top qualifiers in Australia.
https://unendinginsight.wordpress.com/2 ... -analysis/
https://unendinginsight.files.wordpress ... vs_ver.png
I think the statement “The RPM of the Honda PU is also significantly and quite consistently lower than that of the Mercedes PU so Honda still appears to have a good amount of work to do“ is the exact opposite of how things are. If Honda can make power at lower RPM that’s good not bad. More revs good is not the way to go with these PU. IMHO.
As for the time lost under braking, it makes sense you have to brake earlier when you're down of DF levels, it's just the way it it goes. mercedes was simply the best car in melbourne and it wasn't even close, not even with red bull.
I also think that, while honda did make signifficant progress one way or another, red bull and in particular TR cutting down on DF flattered them on the straights to a degree on that track. RB basically made a 180 U turn, they went from absolutely being the best in high speed section T11-12 last year, to now being behind merc, ferrari, haas maybe even alfa romeo. Yes, other aspects of their chassis still made them far superior compared to most of those cars, but in terms of pure aero performance they were far down from what is ussually the case.