Formula One's governing body has announced that it has come to a settlement with Scuderia Ferrari after investigations into its 2019 power unit, considered the most powered in F1.
GIO in the Alfa also had to take a 'new' CE for the race due to issues during qualifying. The following was replaced in parc fermé.
Alfa Romeo Racing Ferrari:
Car 99: CU power box (new)
TPMS of first Q1 tyre set
Cylinder #1 spark plug
Cylinder #1 ignition coil
LHS and RHS fuel lift pump filter
I noticed that as well. Kimi must be a car whisperer, as he is the only Ferrari powered driver to not take one.
I think the ECU and CE, Control Electronics, are two separate things.
The CE is part of the Power Unit and comprises all the logic and control for the ERS including Control units for the MGU-K and MGU-H, DC-DC converters and between the connections between the components. It’s this that is limited to two instances in the season.
The ECU is the Standard McLaren unit which performs signal integration, control and data logging. I can’t find any restriction on the number of instances that may be used.
Fortune favours the prepared; she has no favourites and takes no sides.
Truth is confirmed by inspection and delay; falsehood by haste and uncertainty : Tacitus
@subcritical71 I got that [the new was an old spec], was just trying to clarify what I thought had happened...
@henry Agreed, do you think this is the component where all the timings, maps, etc, are stored? basically the system/PU brain. These are changed race to race if I`m not wrong so it must be re-writable on the software side.
This sounds more like a potential hardware issue on the part so shouldn`t be to much of an issue!
Aside all this, the electronics/software engineering on these power units is mind blowing and I personally think where Mercedes has the upper hand.
Yes, ‘SECU’ standard specification ECU and “CE’ control electronics (an element of the PU) are two separate things, ‘CE’ control electronics (an element of the PU) is not a standardized item.
@subcritical71 I got that [the new was an old spec], was just trying to clarify what I thought had happened...
@henry Agreed, do you think this is the component where all the timings, maps, etc, are stored? basically the system/PU brain. These are changed race to race if I`m not wrong so it must be re-writable on the software side.
This sounds more like a potential hardware issue on the part so shouldn`t be to much of an issue!
Aside all this, the electronics/software engineering on these power units is mind blowing and I personally think where Mercedes has the upper hand.
I think all of the logic/processing for the strategy modes, ICE control etc are in the SECU. The CE module will have its own logic/processing to interpret instructions from the SECU and look after locally relevant performance, reliability and safety aspects. It also reports status information, both as mandated and logged information for the FIA and other data required by the SECU programming.
Fortune favours the prepared; she has no favourites and takes no sides.
Truth is confirmed by inspection and delay; falsehood by haste and uncertainty : Tacitus
Interesting to see that Ferrari's advantage on the long straight only really shows as soon as the DRS activates. Also it looks like Merc's MGU-K cuts off sooner.
Interesting to see that Ferrari's advantage on the long straight only really shows as soon as the DRS activates. Also it looks like Merc's MGU-K cuts off sooner.
Interesting to see that Ferrari's advantage on the long straight only really shows as soon as the DRS activates. Also it looks like Merc's MGU-K cuts off sooner.
I think that all comes back to the fact that as some have suggested The Ferrari in an inherently lower Drag/DF Design.
Shouldn't a low DF design indicate that Ferrari straight advantage should appear more on non-DRS straight? I mean, assuming Mercedes have more DF (rear), they should gain more than Ferrari when DRS is open right?
Shouldn't a low DF design indicate that Ferrari straight advantage should appear more on non-DRS straight? I mean, assuming Mercedes have more DF (rear), they should gain more than Ferrari when DRS is open right?
It depends on power, gearing, and df/drag of the entire car.
At first I thought maybe Ferrari had a bigger DRS flap leading to a bigger DRS effect but it is quite the opposite. Double DRS 2.0 confirmed https://i.imgur.com/hvOf6EY.jpg
It depends on the difference between the flap chord and the regulated 'letterbox' size when DRS is open. When DRS was first introduced in 2011, McLaren used a longer chord flap which was better for downforce and race conditions, whereas Red Bull used a shorter chord flap which was better for qualifying or so it was said at the time.
Yep, if the Ferrari's upper flap is set to go almost horizontal when the mercs remains angled then the Ferrari would have more powerful DRS going by that image, not vice versa.
Yep, if the Ferrari's upper flap is set to go almost horizontal when the mercs remains angled then the Ferrari would have more powerful DRS going by that image, not vice versa.
Yep, if the Ferrari's upper flap is set to go almost horizontal when the mercs remains angled then the Ferrari would have more powerful DRS going by that image, not vice versa.