That the next step is to decrease the engine capacity sounds logical at first, but with turbo engines not that obvious. Seeing across the board that ICE development is slowing down or even stops, a smaller new engine wil require a lot of investment from the several companies. The current engine freeze might give as a bit more insight, that the next version is a dumbed down ICE, that won't be a differentiator anymore and move the focus on recovery, from a H unit or new horizons like front axle recovery (while keeping that analoge brake feeling), with a focus on software.Mudflap wrote: ↑17 Feb 2021, 16:32I think a good chunk of the increased TE is meant to come from high ethanol fuels and inherent knock resistance. I wouldn't say a more efficient engine is necessarily heavier.Blackout wrote: ↑17 Feb 2021, 14:07"If overall PU output is to be conserved"... but maybe we dont need to conserve 1000hp. What if they set the fuel flow at 75kg/hour? wont the engine produce around 750hp with that 60% BTE level and the same fuel as today? 750hp is a good base : )
But then again, how to achieve 60% TE without increasing the weight of the PU...
Only the ICE output (currently 800 hp give or take) is affected by the fuel flow limit but it is difficult to speculate what the output would be at 75 l/h and 60% TE without knowing what the fuel composition (and hence heating value) is. They have already confirmed the fuel is changing so there is little point to consider current fuels.
The other thing we don't seem to know is what the target laptimes are. It's understood that from the aero changes the cars will be some 1-3seconds slower from different sources. Would they afford to lose more lap time from the PU side on top of that ?
It's nice for users to state what they would like to see but the reality is next engines will be smaller displacement, fewer cylinder and the electric motor output will increase.
It is exactly why in on of my earlier posts I speculated that they will just go for the inline 3 and almost entirely reuse one of the existing engine banks. I think spec combustion chamber may be a bit extreme.Jolle wrote: ↑17 Feb 2021, 16:48That the next step is to decrease the engine capacity sounds logical at first, but with turbo engines not that obvious. Seeing across the board that ICE development is slowing down or even stops, a smaller new engine wil require a lot of investment from the several companies. The current engine freeze might give as a bit more insight, that the next version is a dumbed down ICE, that won't be a differentiator anymore and move the focus on recovery, from a H unit or new horizons like front axle recovery (while keeping that analoge brake feeling), with a focus on software.Mudflap wrote: ↑17 Feb 2021, 16:32I think a good chunk of the increased TE is meant to come from high ethanol fuels and inherent knock resistance. I wouldn't say a more efficient engine is necessarily heavier.Blackout wrote: ↑17 Feb 2021, 14:07
"If overall PU output is to be conserved"... but maybe we dont need to conserve 1000hp. What if they set the fuel flow at 75kg/hour? wont the engine produce around 750hp with that 60% BTE level and the same fuel as today? 750hp is a good base : )
But then again, how to achieve 60% TE without increasing the weight of the PU...
Only the ICE output (currently 800 hp give or take) is affected by the fuel flow limit but it is difficult to speculate what the output would be at 75 l/h and 60% TE without knowing what the fuel composition (and hence heating value) is. They have already confirmed the fuel is changing so there is little point to consider current fuels.
The other thing we don't seem to know is what the target laptimes are. It's understood that from the aero changes the cars will be some 1-3seconds slower from different sources. Would they afford to lose more lap time from the PU side on top of that ?
It's nice for users to state what they would like to see but the reality is next engines will be smaller displacement, fewer cylinder and the electric motor output will increase.
Now we already have set values for amount of cylinders, bore, V angle, COG and weight with a standerd fuel system oncoming. I can see a standerd combustion chamber design in the next engine formula.
Why inline-three and not V4? Wouldn't the 1.05L V4 be better suited to the forming the rear-end structure of the vehicle?
It's just the current engine with two cylinders chopped off... How much could it possibly cost? Sure it will need a smaller turbo and a smaller intercooler, but the combustion chamber components would remain identical.
With an inline 3 you can just re-use the cylinder head casting and camshafts. The gas exchange dynmics in the intake and exhaust manifolds are also unchanged so the same specifications can be re-used (even though packaging requirements will be different). It is cheaper overall, of that I have no doubt.JordanMugen wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 07:57Why inline-three and not V4? Wouldn't the 1.05L V4 be better suited to the forming the rear-end structure of the vehicle?
Newey pushed back against the I4 for the V6 layout for "packaging" reasons.Mudflap wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 14:10With an inline 3 you can just re-use the cylinder head casting and camshafts. The gas exchange dynmics in the intake and exhaust manifolds are also unchanged so the same specifications can be re-used (even though packaging requirements will be different). It is cheaper overall, of that I have no doubt.JordanMugen wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 07:57Why inline-three and not V4? Wouldn't the 1.05L V4 be better suited to the forming the rear-end structure of the vehicle?
I think all teams except Ferrari were happy with the 1.6 inline 4 engine architecture over the V6 at the start of the hybrid era so I can't see there beeing too many objections over an inline 3.
Regardless they all agreed on an inline engine until Audi decided not to build an engine.Zynerji wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 14:19Newey pushed back against the I4 for the V6 layout for "packaging" reasons.Mudflap wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 14:10With an inline 3 you can just re-use the cylinder head casting and camshafts. The gas exchange dynmics in the intake and exhaust manifolds are also unchanged so the same specifications can be re-used (even though packaging requirements will be different). It is cheaper overall, of that I have no doubt.JordanMugen wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 07:57
Why inline-three and not V4? Wouldn't the 1.05L V4 be better suited to the forming the rear-end structure of the vehicle?
I think all teams except Ferrari were happy with the 1.6 inline 4 engine architecture over the V6 at the start of the hybrid era so I can't see there beeing too many objections over an inline 3.
If they just chop off two cylinders or even go all seventies and go back to a V12, it would mean a big mountain to climb for any new entry. To make the base a quite simple V6 1.6 with regulated dimensions internally and a standard combustion chamber, VW, BMW or Toyota could enter and be competitive from the start without years of teething problems. Aston Martin even could be a real works team and order a ICE at Cosworth. And the same goes for McLaren. It opens up the field a lot more then sticking with the current highly sophisticated ICE design where multiple big companies couldn’t get their heads round.JordanMugen wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 07:57Why inline-three and not V4? Wouldn't the 1.05L V4 be better suited to the forming the rear-end structure of the vehicle?
Current:
1.6 L V6 turbo ~840bhp
ERS system ~160 bhp
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Total ~1000bhp
2025 unit:
1.05L V4 turbo ~560bhp
ERS system ~440 bhp
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Total ~1000bhp
That would make sense, wouldn't it? The vehicle weight could go up to 850 kg, 900 kg or more to support all the extra batteries needed to support the increased 440 electric hp, and that's no issue, that is the way of the world.
It's just the current engine with two cylinders chopped off... How much could it possibly cost? Sure it will need a smaller turbo and a smaller intercooler, but the combustion chamber components would remain identical.
Of course a V10 or V12 would be even cheaper, but the organisers seem disinterested.
This sounds similar to the homologation process used for Ford and Chevrolet small block V8s in V8 Supercars.