Can you please explain how a +/-120kW motor permanently connected to the crankshaft can't be used for traction control?
Can you please explain how a +/-120kW motor permanently connected to the crankshaft can't be used for traction control?
Nope!Holm86 wrote: ↑11 Nov 2019, 16:00Am I the only one seeing a poor robot trapped in the oil tank??FW17 wrote: ↑11 Nov 2019, 14:29Shouldnt F1 have allowed more open rules for 2021 while just keeping the 105 kg and 100kg/hr rule?
This could have encouraged the Porsche V4 (with some development) to be considered as an works or customer option
https://images.cdn.circlesix.co/image/2 ... 4a8398.jpg
I was thinking more about torque vectoring rather than plain wheelspin protection. Anyway, if it could be used for that they'd do it now, which is obviously not the case based on the many examples when the driver spins the wheels and looses it.AJI wrote: ↑11 Nov 2019, 23:02Can you please explain how a +/-120kW motor permanently connected to the crankshaft can't be used for traction control?
They only have max -120kW of sneaky TC, and then only if they haven't recovered the full K-recovery amount for the lap. Either way, with over 600kW of boosted ICE power on tap there are still plenty of opportunites to spin it up and lose it.
If I remember correctly only the stored energy is limited, so they could still use the kers, they just have to waste that power in some form of a resistor.
Now you're thinking like an F1 team!
May or may not join is right, but F1 loses nothing by relaxing a few of the conditions which were put in place as a cost measure for existing manufacturers. With 7 years of development the existing manufacturers are not disadvantaged in any way.mzso wrote:
Because rules are not created for what a random manufacturer, who may or may not join
Like hell they aren't. All of them need to re-design their PUs from almost square one if you make notable changes. Allowing 4 cylinders and different displacement would be such in this fuel limited era AFAIK.
If they allowed V4s every manufacturer would switch to them to minimize internal losses. Any change in layout would cause havoc as they all scramble for new engines.FW17 wrote: ↑12 Nov 2019, 09:10May or may not join is right, but F1 loses nothing by relaxing a few of the conditions which were put in place as a cost measure for existing manufacturers. With 7 years of development the existing manufacturers are not disadvantaged in any way.mzso wrote:
Because rules are not created for what a random manufacturer, who may or may not join
In the current scenario where manufacturers are facing a downturn and a shift in technology towards pure EV, what is wrong in keeping the door open.