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Could a F1 Team used the electrical engine in order to drive the 1st gear backward ? The car would technicaly be able to be driven in reverse and the team could save a lot of weight using a full electric reverse.
What is your opinion about it ?
yes of course
If you want the the car to reverse using an excising electric motor in the car you would need to decouple it from the ICE, this would add weight and another part that can fail. Adding another electric motor would mean the same.GM7 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 01:48Looking at the 2022 technical regulation and especially the article 9.8 "Reverse gear" i was wondering one thing...
https://zupimages.net/up/20/51/3r56.png
Could a F1 Team used the electrical engine in order to drive the 1st gear backward ? The car would technicaly be able to be driven in reverse and the team could save a lot of weight using a full electric reverse.
What is your opinion about it ?
The water pump and oil pumps! Oh God! won't they think about the pumps?!GM7 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 01:48Looking at the 2022 technical regulation and especially the article 9.8 "Reverse gear" i was wondering one thing...
https://zupimages.net/up/20/51/3r56.png
Could a F1 Team used the electrical engine in order to drive the 1st gear backward ? The car would technicaly be able to be driven in reverse and the team could save a lot of weight using a full electric reverse.
What is your opinion about it ?
Because the MHU-K is geared to the crank. If the electric motor would go in reverse, so would the crank. Of course you could do this, but I don’t think you want to suck a few cranks of air through the exhaust into the combustion chamber.
with 'reverse gear engaged' would the engine be turning backwards?Jolle wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 17:27Because the MHU-K is geared to the crank. If the electric motor would go in reverse, so would the crank. Of course you could do this, but I don’t think you want to suck a few cranks of air through the exhaust into the combustion chamber.
With a reverse gear anyway... what’s the point to have it electric? Reverse gear is there because it’s in the rules, only to be used in emergencies by the drivers (because it’s fragile).Big Tea wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 17:31with 'reverse gear engaged' would the engine be turning backwards?
Quite right, but what I had in mind when I read reverse is going to be required was to have a means for the driver to get a broken car off the track. most of the exits seem to be behind the barier and the car can reverse into it cleaaring the trackJolle wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 17:34With a reverse gear anyway... what’s the point to have it electric? Reverse gear is there because it’s in the rules, only to be used in emergencies by the drivers (because it’s fragile).
I assumed the reason to thought in the question was, why not ditch the reverse gear and just use the K motor? The answer to that is: you need a reverse gear.
In theory a nice idea, but that would mean that they have to change the whole way they operate the car. All is controlled by hydraulic pressure (gearbox, throttle, clutch, etc etc) for which the ICE has to run.Big Tea wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 17:37Quite right, but what I had in mind when I read reverse is going to be required was to have a means for the driver to get a broken car off the track. most of the exits seem to be behind the barier and the car can reverse into it cleaaring the trackJolle wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 17:34With a reverse gear anyway... what’s the point to have it electric? Reverse gear is there because it’s in the rules, only to be used in emergencies by the drivers (because it’s fragile).
I assumed the reason to thought in the question was, why not ditch the reverse gear and just use the K motor? The answer to that is: you need a reverse gear.