I think the helmet cam from winter testing is pretty suspicious
I think that is what the “brake migration” setting, seen on all steering wheels, does. It progressively reduces front bias as the speed, and hence load transfer, drops. If they didn’t do that the MGU-K harvest would not be possible below about 180kph.Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 08:02Maybe it was not an automatic change from one corner to the next (what is done by drivers easily), but an automatic adjustment on each braking. I mean, when they hit the brakes the balance is set as the driver adjusted it, and as the speed decreases balance is automatically adjusted because optimal balance is different at 250km/h than it is at the end of the braking when entering the corner at 140km/h. Drivers can´t change it during a braking
henry wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 09:53I think that is what the “brake migration” setting, seen on all steering wheels, does. It progressively reduces front bias as the speed, and hence load transfer, drops. If they didn’t do that the MGU-K harvest would not be possible below about 180kph.Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 08:02Maybe it was not an automatic change from one corner to the next (what is done by drivers easily), but an automatic adjustment on each braking. I mean, when they hit the brakes the balance is set as the driver adjusted it, and as the speed decreases balance is automatically adjusted because optimal balance is different at 250km/h than it is at the end of the braking when entering the corner at 140km/h. Drivers can´t change it during a braking
Please explain more.henry wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 09:53I think that is what the “brake migration” setting, seen on all steering wheels, does. It progressively reduces front bias as the speed, and hence load transfer, drops. If they didn’t do that the MGU-K harvest would not be possible below about 180kph.Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 08:02Maybe it was not an automatic change from one corner to the next (what is done by drivers easily), but an automatic adjustment on each braking. I mean, when they hit the brakes the balance is set as the driver adjusted it, and as the speed decreases balance is automatically adjusted because optimal balance is different at 250km/h than it is at the end of the braking when entering the corner at 140km/h. Drivers can´t change it during a braking
I think the brake balance is as you say, the rear force is the combination of friction brakes and MGU-K.sosic2121 wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 15:19henry wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 09:53I think that is what the “brake migration” setting, seen on all steering wheels, does. It progressively reduces front bias as the speed, and hence load transfer, drops. If they didn’t do that the MGU-K harvest would not be possible below about 180kph.Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 08:02Maybe it was not an automatic change from one corner to the next (what is done by drivers easily), but an automatic adjustment on each braking. I mean, when they hit the brakes the balance is set as the driver adjusted it, and as the speed decreases balance is automatically adjusted because optimal balance is different at 250km/h than it is at the end of the braking when entering the corner at 140km/h. Drivers can´t change it during a brakingPlease explain more.henry wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 09:53I think that is what the “brake migration” setting, seen on all steering wheels, does. It progressively reduces front bias as the speed, and hence load transfer, drops. If they didn’t do that the MGU-K harvest would not be possible below about 180kph.Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 08:02Maybe it was not an automatic change from one corner to the next (what is done by drivers easily), but an automatic adjustment on each braking. I mean, when they hit the brakes the balance is set as the driver adjusted it, and as the speed decreases balance is automatically adjusted because optimal balance is different at 250km/h than it is at the end of the braking when entering the corner at 140km/h. Drivers can´t change it during a braking
Do you believe that brake balance adjusts only front and rear brakes? I believe they adjust front brakes vs rear brakes+mguk,
so I don't understand why would break balance impact harvesting.
Also I believe that at high speed it's beneficial to have almost 50:50 brake balance, and as car slowes down to have more and more braking power (%, not absolute) on front axle.
So, IMO Renault drivers would still choose balance they wanted depending on the speed they start breaking with, and then car would optimize it self rest of the way.
If anyone has some video or evidence of this can you please share.
as the road speed decreases doesn't the braking force (rear axle torque) from the K remain afap constant ?
The tractive effort at the road is power/road speed. If the power stays constant and the road speed decreases the tractive effort goes up. The gear changes keep the K, and ICE, in their operating range. As you have said in other places they keep the revs high to keep the K torque and current down.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 18:32as the road speed decreases doesn't the braking force (rear axle torque) from the K remain afap constant ?
as downshifting gives afap constant '120 kW' power by maintaining afap ideal K rpm (voltage) and ideal K torque (current)
without downshifting the K torque would need to increase with falling roadspeed and the K and C would go off-design
or if the K torque (current) was made constant the K power would fall below '120 kW'
Knowingly breaking the rules should carry a hefty penalty, regardless of how little advantage it provided, the Spygate penalty was only that bad because Ferrari and the FIA were pretty much one and the same, BAR got banned for 2 races for their under weight car and Benetton got thrown out of the Championship in 94 for their traction controlNathanOlder wrote: ↑17 Oct 2019, 08:35So if found guilty some websites are saying they could be thrown out of this years championship, and the last time a team was caught cheating and got punished was Mclaren back in 2007. Surely this is nowhere near as bad as spy-gate! I see this as just another team trying to get away with an unfair advantage. Just like a team turning up with an illegal front wing, or running a car underweight.
I do not remember that (and wikipedia does not report it either).Marc.W wrote: ↑17 Oct 2019, 10:40Benetton got thrown out of the Championship in 94 for their traction controlNathanOlder wrote: ↑17 Oct 2019, 08:35So if found guilty some websites are saying they could be thrown out of this years championship, and the last time a team was caught cheating and got punished was Mclaren back in 2007. Surely this is nowhere near as bad as spy-gate! I see this as just another team trying to get away with an unfair advantage. Just like a team turning up with an illegal front wing, or running a car underweight.
My mistake, for some reason I thought they were disqualified.Xwang wrote: ↑17 Oct 2019, 11:02I do not remember that (and wikipedia does not report it either).Marc.W wrote: ↑17 Oct 2019, 10:40Benetton got thrown out of the Championship in 94 for their traction controlNathanOlder wrote: ↑17 Oct 2019, 08:35So if found guilty some websites are saying they could be thrown out of this years championship, and the last time a team was caught cheating and got punished was Mclaren back in 2007. Surely this is nowhere near as bad as spy-gate! I see this as just another team trying to get away with an unfair advantage. Just like a team turning up with an illegal front wing, or running a car underweight.