Sadly you'll never be able to appreciate the irony of your statement, ss.saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 07:22Unlike some on here, Whiting’s position couldn’t allow him to just blab blab blab when explaining FIA technical rules.
I also think Charlie’s quote would be different if talking to a reporter vs. technical delegate from a team. He was talking to a reporter here and did not go into the intricate detail of every case the light would turn on.roon wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 15:03Sadly you'll never be able to appreciate the irony of your statement, ss.saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 07:22Unlike some on here, Whiting’s position couldn’t allow him to just blab blab blab when explaining FIA technical rules.
At least three threads dedicated to you, several warnings by the mods, engagement by a large number of posters, data directly demonstrating your misunderstanding, insulting people in Italian, 150 negative votes and it finally ends with "fake news".saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 20:46I have no problem with choosing a Japanese F1 magazine take on a formula one power unit matter under discussion over that of the official formula one site and the official FIA spokesman on the matter.
if the data plots in this article were false, another team would have raised a protest at some point claiming Honda are doing something wrong. That hasnt happened as far as we know, so to me the best assumption is that they *all* harvest while under throttle at some point. it's unlikely to be at high power demand, more likely at lower demand in my mind.nzjrs wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 20:59At least three threads dedicated to you, several warnings by the mods, engagement by a large number of posters, data directly demonstrating your misunderstanding, insulting people in Italian, 150 negative votes and it finally ends with "fake news".saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 20:46I have no problem with choosing a Japanese F1 magazine take on a formula one power unit matter under discussion over that of the official formula one site and the official FIA spokesman on the matter.
I think you’re right and driving against the K mainly happens at part throttle.ian_s wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 22:41if the data plots in this article were false, another team would have raised a protest at some point claiming Honda are doing something wrong. That hasnt happened as far as we know, so to me the best assumption is that they *all* harvest while under throttle at some point. it's unlikely to be at high power demand, more likely at lower demand in my mind.nzjrs wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 20:59At least three threads dedicated to you, several warnings by the mods, engagement by a large number of posters, data directly demonstrating your misunderstanding, insulting people in Italian, 150 negative votes and it finally ends with "fake news".saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 20:46I have no problem with choosing a Japanese F1 magazine take on a formula one power unit matter under discussion over that of the official formula one site and the official FIA spokesman on the matter.
take these figures for an example:
MGU-k output = 120kw
ICE output = 880kw
total output = 1000kw ( nice round number for simplicity)
the driver demands 20 Kw at 20% throttle. Ice actually runs at 140 Kw and K harvests at 120Kw: total output 20Kw
the driver demands 40 Kw at 40% throttle. Ice actually runs at 160 Kw and K harvests at 120Kw: total output 40Kw
It's never going to the this simple as 0% throttle should be equal to engine braking so less than 0 Kw output, but it demonstrates that you can power the ICE higher than the demanded 'Torque' but the actual torque is reduced by the MGU-K
Ian_s has already alluded to this point but let me try to make it a little more clear.saviour stivala wrote: ↑20 May 2019, 20:46I have no problem with choosing a Japanese F1 magazine take on a formula one power unit matter under discussion over that of the official formula one site and the official FIA spokesman on the matter.
This might happen when the engine can harvest enough to not run out of battery on the next straight. Remember that the rules state that the batteries state of charge may differ by 4mj between empty and full.henry wrote:However, last year Amus published some data comparing Mercedes and Ferrari at the end of straight at Hochenheim. When I wrote a simulation the only way I could match the Ferrari data was to have both K and H generating simultaneously at the max throttle at the very end of the straight. So I hold the opinion that it is possible that sometimes it may happen that a team might choose that option.
I didn’t mention that the MGU-K was used to drive the Ferrari a little longer than the Mercedes, but you’re right that this was in fact the operating mode I simulated.Tzk wrote: ↑21 May 2019, 22:09This might happen when the engine can harvest enough to not run out of battery on the next straight. Remember that the rules state that the batteries state of charge may differ by 4mj between empty and full.henry wrote:However, last year Amus published some data comparing Mercedes and Ferrari at the end of straight at Hochenheim. When I wrote a simulation the only way I could match the Ferrari data was to have both K and H generating simultaneously at the max throttle at the very end of the straight. So I hold the opinion that it is possible that sometimes it may happen that a team might choose that option.
So lets assume that you would overcharge the battery on the next
Braking zone, why wouldn‘t you use the mgu-k for the full straight right before said zone?!
Well, maybe the fact that it would be incredibly inefficent under race conditions to do this when the cars are basically energy limited because of the limited amount of fuel?saviour stivala wrote: ↑22 May 2019, 14:47What was back than preventing teams harvesting by the MGU-K when not using the brakes?
Good post.Dr. Acula wrote: ↑22 May 2019, 16:09Well, maybe the fact that it would be incredibly inefficent under race conditions to do this when the cars are basically energy limited because of the limited amount of fuel?saviour stivala wrote: ↑22 May 2019, 14:47What was back than preventing teams harvesting by the MGU-K when not using the brakes?
If you harvest under off throttle conditions, regardless if braking or just lift and coast, you gain overall system efficiency because otherwise the energy would be wasted either by the brakes or simply by aerodynamic drag.
If you use the ICE directly to shove some energy to the MGU-K you already start down at somewhere around 40-45% thermal efficency and it only gets worse from there. So you lose overall efficiency.
Also let us do here a short calculation. How much speed would a F1 at car at 300km/h and 800kg mass actually lose when the driver does lift and coast for 1 second and the MGU-K would start to harvest with 120kW?
So it would lose about 6.5km/h...that's not very massive. Also if a car behind would keep its speed of 300km/h during this 1 second it wouldn't even gain a full meter. But the car in front has won one second of MGU-K boost which it can use very efficently when it accelerates out of a slow corner.