That's an odd fault. First of all, why would they have another control unit dedicated to injection, the standard Mclaren Electronics ECU should be more than capable of handling that part. Maybe some small circuit boards built into the injector looms? But what would be the purpose?MtthsMlw wrote: ↑05 Apr 2019, 17:40https://formula1.ferrari.com/en/2019-ba ... t-circuit/Charles Leclerc will use the same power unit in China that he used for the Bahrain Grand Prix. The unit will be duly fitted on the number 16 car, in which the Monegasque driver had to settle for third place having led the race in style until a few laps from the flag.
Anomaly. Following the race, the Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow technicians and engineers traced the fault on the car to a short circuit within an injection system control unit. This type of problem had never been seen before on the component in question.
That's what I was wondering. Isn't control of the power unit handled by the standard control hardware? Isn't that also a controlled and limited part? According to FIA documents, nothing unusual was spotted in scrutineering or changed in parc ferme on Leclerc's car. Lets see what they say about elements next race.alexx_88 wrote: ↑08 Apr 2019, 11:01That's an odd fault. First of all, why would they have another control unit dedicated to injection, the standard Mclaren Electronics ECU should be more than capable of handling that part. Maybe some small circuit boards built into the injector looms? But what would be the purpose?MtthsMlw wrote: ↑05 Apr 2019, 17:40https://formula1.ferrari.com/en/2019-ba ... t-circuit/Charles Leclerc will use the same power unit in China that he used for the Bahrain Grand Prix. The unit will be duly fitted on the number 16 car, in which the Monegasque driver had to settle for third place having led the race in style until a few laps from the flag.
Anomaly. Following the race, the Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow technicians and engineers traced the fault on the car to a short circuit within an injection system control unit. This type of problem had never been seen before on the component in question.
subcritical71 wrote: ↑08 Apr 2019, 13:08Yep, at least we aren’t talking about the smell of the fuel... oh wait!
It would be awesome if Binotto said they put a can of Red Bull on the fuel...subcritical71 wrote: ↑08 Apr 2019, 13:08Yep, at least we aren’t talking about the smell of the fuel... oh wait!
Always suspicions on anyone, when they have the best stuff.
Yeah, apparently the Ferrari PU runs on grapefruit juice. I wonder what that's about.subcritical71 wrote: ↑08 Apr 2019, 13:08Yep, at least we aren’t talking about the smell of the fuel... oh wait!
A driver board?alexx_88 wrote: ↑08 Apr 2019, 11:01That's an odd fault. First of all, why would they have another control unit dedicated to injection, the standard Mclaren Electronics ECU should be more than capable of handling that part. Maybe some small circuit boards built into the injector looms? But what would be the purpose?MtthsMlw wrote: ↑05 Apr 2019, 17:40https://formula1.ferrari.com/en/2019-ba ... t-circuit/Charles Leclerc will use the same power unit in China that he used for the Bahrain Grand Prix. The unit will be duly fitted on the number 16 car, in which the Monegasque driver had to settle for third place having led the race in style until a few laps from the flag.
Anomaly. Following the race, the Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow technicians and engineers traced the fault on the car to a short circuit within an injection system control unit. This type of problem had never been seen before on the component in question.
I remember I've already read something about the presence of mercaptans in racing gasoline, but I don't remember when and where.MtthsMlw wrote: ↑08 Apr 2019, 18:29https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nootkatone
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grapefruit_mercaptan
the Noonakatone (not linked here) seems potentially to qualify as a biofuel (remember 5.7% of an F1 fuel is bio)
I can't interpret this sentence. Not sure what you're trying to say.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑09 Apr 2019, 09:545.7% biobutanol would have about the same heat at 4% of the non-bio fuel
the above 5.7% would give about 1.5% more ICE power