trishnafile5 wrote: ↑07 Sep 2020, 08:39
There are a few cars which put out Formula one numbers in terms of horsepower, and also incorporate a hybrid system. What exactly makes Formula One engines more expensive to develop and make? Is it the technology, or just that there is no economy of scale to absorb the costs of developing an engine?
I think you could probably go to AER or Judd with "just" 15m GBP (inclusive for R+D and the actual supply) and ask them to deliver you a Formula One 1.6 hybrid power unit and they could probably deliver it.
You'll probably be 300+hp down on the others (i.e., hopelessly uncompetitive), but you would have a (probably very unreliable) power unit that complies to Formula One regulations which you could put in your car and be race legal
Thoughts?
TNTHead wrote: ↑07 Sep 2020, 20:25
And let's not forget the degree of complexity is quite a lot higher: it's a highly efficient ICE
If you are happy to be 300hp down and way off the pace, you
don't need to reach 50% efficiency!
You only need to achieve those lofty goals if you actually want to be competitive.
trishnafile5 wrote: ↑07 Sep 2020, 08:39
What exactly makes Formula One engines more expensive to develop and make?
I'm not so sure does that it does cost less to develop a road car engine than a F1 engine. Costs of $400-700 million seem to be bandied about for a new road car engine family design including all the tooling and so on. Obviously the unit cost of the F1 power unit is a lot more, but that's not unremarkable.