yes, yes and yes. and because all the manufactures use the 10.500 - 12.000 rpm at all times, without exception, suggest that they use 100kg/h all of the time. With the fuel flow per cycle at max at 10.500 this gives max torque at that precise point and despite all the theories, engine friction, heat management etc is at its best at as low rpm as possible, therefore max power is also at 10.500 rpm.hollus wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 09:03stivala, I think you are making things confusing in a articular point.
Do we agree that the rules have a max fuel range, not point, between 10500 and 15000 rpm? That they are allowed the same fuel per second everywhere in that range?
And do we agree that the cars are driven back and forth over a range of about 1500rpm as they go up the gears?
I think talking of ranges, not points, would avoid a lot of misunderstandings.
Now back to IMHO: the engineering challenge was never to optimize PUs for a certain RPM, but for a range of about 1500 RPM. Back in 2014, for many teams, this range was about 2000rpm until they narrowed the gearing.
It should be expressed as "with max fuel flow reached at 10500rpm it is the RPM at which combustion will peak/be the strongest (max power speed)". above that max power speed combustion can only weaken because while max fuel flow stays the same, the RPM increasing will increase the number of combustions each of which will have to share the same volume of fuel the leaser number of combustions did.Jolle wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 09:20yes, yes and yes. and because all the manufactures use the 10.500 - 12.000 rpm at all times, without exception, suggest that they use 100kg/h all of the time. With the fuel flow per cycle at max at 10.500 this gives max torque at that precise point and despite all the theories, engine friction, heat management etc is at its best at as low rpm as possible, therefore max power is also at 10.500 rpm.hollus wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 09:03stivala, I think you are making things confusing in a articular point.
Do we agree that the rules have a max fuel range, not point, between 10500 and 15000 rpm? That they are allowed the same fuel per second everywhere in that range?
And do we agree that the cars are driven back and forth over a range of about 1500rpm as they go up the gears?
I think talking of ranges, not points, would avoid a lot of misunderstandings.
Now back to IMHO: the engineering challenge was never to optimize PUs for a certain RPM, but for a range of about 1500 RPM. Back in 2014, for many teams, this range was about 2000rpm until they narrowed the gearing.
so (at 10300 rpm) a maximum of 98.2 kg/hr
Aren’t gear ratios in Monte Carlo to be the same as those at Monza or anywhere else according to the rules?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 11:29so (at 10300 rpm) a maximum of 98.2 kg/hr
this has somewhat reduced the notional mismatch (compared to an operating range starting at 10500 and 100 kg/hr)
and as has been said the rpm range has been reduced in recent years
with 8 overall ratios fixed but increased corner speeds combined with decreased maximum speeds
is there still the permitted annual ratio change usually taken up at the Monaco GP ?
But you will have more smaller combustions in the same amount of time and as such the power will not drop.saviour stivala wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 10:24It should be expressed as "with max fuel flow reached at 10500rpm it is the RPM at which combustion will peak/be the strongest (max power speed)". above that max power speed combustion can only weaken because while max fuel flow stays the same, the RPM increasing will increase the number of combustions each of which will have to share the same volume of fuel the leaser number of combustions did.Jolle wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 09:20yes, yes and yes. and because all the manufactures use the 10.500 - 12.000 rpm at all times, without exception, suggest that they use 100kg/h all of the time. With the fuel flow per cycle at max at 10.500 this gives max torque at that precise point and despite all the theories, engine friction, heat management etc is at its best at as low rpm as possible, therefore max power is also at 10.500 rpm.hollus wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 09:03stivala, I think you are making things confusing in a articular point.
Do we agree that the rules have a max fuel range, not point, between 10500 and 15000 rpm? That they are allowed the same fuel per second everywhere in that range?
And do we agree that the cars are driven back and forth over a range of about 1500rpm as they go up the gears?
I think talking of ranges, not points, would avoid a lot of misunderstandings.
Now back to IMHO: the engineering challenge was never to optimize PUs for a certain RPM, but for a range of about 1500 RPM. Back in 2014, for many teams, this range was about 2000rpm until they narrowed the gearing.
Would these "smaller combustions" (for example at 11k rpm) allow for higher CR to increase efficiency a little bit?
Yes, a simplified theory.Mudflap wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 19:01But you will have more smaller combustions in the same amount of time and as such the power will not drop.saviour stivala wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 10:24It should be expressed as "with max fuel flow reached at 10500rpm it is the RPM at which combustion will peak/be the strongest (max power speed)". above that max power speed combustion can only weaken because while max fuel flow stays the same, the RPM increasing will increase the number of combustions each of which will have to share the same volume of fuel the leaser number of combustions did.Jolle wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 09:20
yes, yes and yes. and because all the manufactures use the 10.500 - 12.000 rpm at all times, without exception, suggest that they use 100kg/h all of the time. With the fuel flow per cycle at max at 10.500 this gives max torque at that precise point and despite all the theories, engine friction, heat management etc is at its best at as low rpm as possible, therefore max power is also at 10.500 rpm.
I completely agree.Jolle wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 19:47Yes, a simplified theory.
In the simplified theory the amount of power is only dependent of the amount of fuel you burn in an amount of time. In theory it shouldn't matter if you have a 1 cylinder 500 cc with a big turbo or a 3l v12. Fuel has an amount of energy, burn that and you have power.
But in real life, you have to take in all the losses, which are greater with the rise of rpm.
No one is disputing that.saviour stivala wrote: ↑06 Jul 2019, 13:08There will be a 13.21% decrease in fuel flow use in each combustion per minute between 10500rpm max fuel flow/max power speed and 12000RPM.
Aerodynamic drag will mean that you spend more time at the higher revs since it causes acceleration to decrease and it takes longer for each 100rpm increment. Another reason to move peak power above 10500.hollus wrote: ↑06 Jul 2019, 13:45No one is disputing that.saviour stivala wrote: ↑06 Jul 2019, 13:08There will be a 13.21% decrease in fuel flow use in each combustion per minute between 10500rpm max fuel flow/max power speed and 12000RPM.
At the same time, you'll have a 13.21% increase in the number of combustions per minute, which doesn't quite compensate, but is not too far from it.
The fact is that you have to accept being at 12000 just as many seconds as you are at 10500, it is the price to pay for upshifts. And the reason one might want to compromise. Even if you really have your peak at 10500 (the best possible peak power and the easiest thing to set-up), you will still run, quite a bit of time, at 12000, where you will be quite compromised. Your ICE will spend approximately the same amount of time at 10500 as at 10600, 10700 ...11000, 11100 ... 11900 and 12000 rpm.
The only way to avoid running at 12000rpm some of the time is running at 9000rpm some of the time, which is obviously much worse.