saviour stivala wrote: ↑09 Aug 2020, 11:56
henry wrote: ↑08 Aug 2020, 23:34
saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Aug 2020, 10:13
Where in the regulations is the 'running' of the turbo in e-supercharger mode for 33.33 seconds is stated?
Where the regulation says that 4MJ may be sent to the MGU-K from the ES per lap. 4MJ at 120kW is 33.33 seconds.
So you meant operating turbo in E-MODE by an energy path 'ES - TO - K - TO - H at 4mj @ 120kw = 33.33 seconds.
Do you believe that the 'H' running in E-MODE and sharing ES power with 'K' when in maximum output mode can last for 33.33 seconds over a lap?.
The ES drives both the K and the H. The K drain for a lap is fixed by the rules at 120kW and 4MJ. The H drain is unconstrained by the rules. If we assume the H power requirement in this mode is 80kW, the energy required for 33.3 seconds is 2.7MJ. Total ES drain over a lap 6.7MJ.
I’m saying that the technical goal is 33.33 seconds. To do that the ES needS to provide 6.7 MJ. They start the lap with 4MJ. They need to recover 2.7 MJ over the lap. From a recovery point of view I believe it’s possible; at Silverstone, other tracks will vary.
On Hamilton’s pole lap last week braking lasted 10.9 seconds so recovery by the K around 1MJ, part throttle lasted 16.1 seconds. If they hot charge for 10 seconds that’s another 1MJ from the K. To recover the remainder they need 0.7MJ from the H when at part throttle, an average 44kW. That’s a tall ask so they might have to do a bit of ICE only running at the end of straights. But I think it’s doable.
Whether the ES, H or K can manage these duty cycles or if the cooling is feasible I have no idea. I also don’t know how the actual SOC round the lap plays out.
I believe that from the ERS point of view the qualifying lap starts at the exit of the last corner so the actual numbers are a bit more onerous.
Edit: I forgot to credit @juzh for the pole lap with telemetry from which I took the numbers. Thanks
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