Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑05 Nov 2019, 17:28
this is the rule which isn't ever obeyed - or the cars wouldn't work
the fuel flow rate into the ICE must never exceed 100 kg/hr
unless fuel is injected continuously at this rate some fuel must be (temporarily) stored after the measurement point
unless fuel is injected continuously into each cylinder for at least 1/3 of a revolution the flow rate will exceed 100 kg/hr
the rule book fails to say that rule only applies for periods of time longer than the ICE cycle time for each rpm
I'm sorry, but i fail to see why your point would interfere with the rule i mentioned. Of course you got some piping behind the sensor which is filled with fuel but (iirc) the allowed volume is limited and doesn't count as catchtank.
I also disagree on your point regarding the max flow. If the allowed maximum flow is 100kg/h, then you simply can't inject more fuel on a single injector. Well, technically you could if you somehow trick the sensor, but this would apply as a procedure or system to bypass the limit and is thus illegal. Of course this would mean that you can effectively raise the limit of the injected fuel per ignition by simply injecting longer.
Sieper wrote: ↑05 Nov 2019, 16:10
No it doesn’t jamming (or modifying) a signal about the flow measurement is totally not included in above quoted rule. That is just about increasing the flow rate. They are not doing that, they use the normal system, they just obscure measurements about that. And likely with deniability. Electrical interference, just bad luck for us. If, in fact that is true of course,
So your point is that the "bad luck" of wrong readings (or simply no valid readings) is NOT a system or procedure to raise the fuel flow beyond the allowed limit?
Also: don't you think that the FIA will get suspicious if this happens too often? I read about 2K measurements per second (2000Hz). If you need extra power on a long straight, you'll have to discard thousands of datapoints AND you'll see a difference on the speedtrace of the car. That's way too obvious...
Sieper wrote: ↑05 Nov 2019, 16:32
Why do you say that. Ferrari has been running the higher DF levels rear wing all season. They have ran, and are running most DF of all top teams. That didn't suddenly change.
IF this is the case, why is Ferrari deas slow in slow and medium-fast corners and lightning-fast on straights? And exactly the opposite for merc, they're fast in corners and slow on the straights.
Conclusion: Ferrari runs less drag than Merc. Assuming that aero efficiency of these two is similar, Merc MUST run more downforce.