PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑18 Dec 2019, 20:24
... the most advanced ultrasonic meters integrate the fuel flow over the entire pipe diameter, in other words they take a velocity snap-shot of the fluid and it is easy to find out what flow regime is occurring in the fluid. Any special temperature manipulation can also be captured by the sensor. Forcing the sensor to under-report the fuel has to be done by some serious outside interference!
the fuel motion through the meter in the calibration lab is presumably constant aka steady, and 1 dimensional
the fuel motion through the meter in the car is (relatively to this) as inconstant and 3 dimensional as may be ?
so eg the velocity snapshot isn't necessarily perfectly representative of the flow rate
eg so-called flow reversion (ie varying partial flow reversion) obtains even in our road cars exhaust and induction systems
neither (maybe) is the electronic sampling always perfectly representative of the actual velocity field
the F1 car carries at close range intensely varying EM fields - these not limited by the rule book
yes I have seen cases of accidental interference in less hostile EM environments