Energy you mean?
just google it, they use on average around 1.7/2 kg of fuel per lap. With a 50% efficiency it's easy to look up the amount of J's they use
Energy you mean?
No. Generation should provide the average power through the whole lap, and batteries would be the buffer. If it's less the motor will be constantly low on power, if it's more than generation is oversized. Making it variable power would also mean over-sizing as well as efficiency impairment.
I think you need to read up some basic physics. Especially the differences between power and energy.mzso wrote: ↑03 Mar 2021, 22:25No. Generation should provide the average power through the whole lap, and batteries would be the buffer. If it's less the motor will be constantly low on power, if it's more than generation is oversized. Making it variable power would also mean over-sizing as well as efficiency impairment.
you want to know what it takes to do a certain distance (lap) over a specific time (comparable to lap times now), this will give you an amount of energy you need. Or even, you can take the race distance, 305 km, in 1:30 hours and the current amount of fuel uses (110kg), you have energy (the 110kg fuel), the time (1:30 hours) and you have the generator you need. Or batteries, or whatever.
10% more efficient, 10% less sound and how are they going to double the amount of recovered energy from a smaller engine?lio007 wrote: ↑28 Feb 2021, 16:58Nice new piece from AMuS on the next-gen PU's:
https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/formel-1/f1-motor-2025-infos-daten/
Main new points seem to be:
- Improve fuel efficiency at full load by 10%
- Combustion engine will lose power and electric drive will gain power
- Slightly larger, but more powerful batteries
- Competition set to take place mainly on the electric side
- Cost reduction on the combustion engine through measures like open-sourcing components
- Allowing a more liberal relationship with electric energy management (may still cap power, but allow more freedom on energy within that limit)
- Prescribed battery technologies (for cost reduction) but permitted freedom of design within that limit.
- Bring back active driver decision over deployment with push-to-pass type features
No. I want to now what power an engine needs to run at continuously to serve the energy generation needs. Which would obviously be the optimization target, efficiency wise. In a series hybrid you'd want to continuously run the engine at peak efficiency, obviously.Jolle wrote: ↑04 Mar 2021, 00:21you want to know what it takes to do a certain distance (lap) over a specific time (comparable to lap times now), this will give you an amount of energy you need. Or even, you can take the race distance, 305 km, in 1:30 hours and the current amount of fuel uses (110kg), you have energy (the 110kg fuel), the time (1:30 hours) and you have the generator you need. Or batteries, or whatever.
Around 600 kWmzso wrote: ↑05 Mar 2021, 23:52No. I want to now what power an engine needs to run at continuously to serve the energy generation needs. Which would obviously be the optimization target, efficiency wise. In a series hybrid you'd want to continuously run the engine at peak efficiency, obviously.Jolle wrote: ↑04 Mar 2021, 00:21you want to know what it takes to do a certain distance (lap) over a specific time (comparable to lap times now), this will give you an amount of energy you need. Or even, you can take the race distance, 305 km, in 1:30 hours and the current amount of fuel uses (110kg), you have energy (the 110kg fuel), the time (1:30 hours) and you have the generator you need. Or batteries, or whatever.
I wonder what would be the most efficient combustion engine. (I was mocked for mentioning gas turbines, among others..)
And what would the ideal fuel be. Why was toluene better before it was banned?
Well that would certainly extend the braking distances, which might be no bad thing. I would guess that peak braking effort might be halved at least.mzso wrote: ↑06 Mar 2021, 00:03If we're heading towards electrification. I wonder if it would make sense to allow cryo-cooling, or whether it would be prohibitively expensive and complicated to sustain, or have any real-world relevance for the foreseeable future.
I definitely would mandate direct drive. It would be an added challenge on motor design. But ultimately gears always add unreliability and inefficiency, plus there's nothing to develop there.
Ultimately I would move it forward 4WD as well, with re-gen braking only.
Good for Le Mans or something, but not racy as open wheel racing. Having a feel for the brakes is one of those perks between drivers, one of the reasons front end re-gen isn’t introduced into F1, the “feel” of BBW is still not the same as an analog system.henry wrote: ↑06 Mar 2021, 00:42Well that would certainly extend the braking distances, which might be no bad thing. I would guess that peak braking effort might be halved at least.mzso wrote: ↑06 Mar 2021, 00:03If we're heading towards electrification. I wonder if it would make sense to allow cryo-cooling, or whether it would be prohibitively expensive and complicated to sustain, or have any real-world relevance for the foreseeable future.
I definitely would mandate direct drive. It would be an added challenge on motor design. But ultimately gears always add unreliability and inefficiency, plus there's nothing to develop there.
Ultimately I would move it forward 4WD as well, with re-gen braking only.
toluene is unusually dense so its heat per litre is outstanding (though its heat per kg isn't)
Sorry, I wasn’t clear at all. I meant that the retardation force would be very much lower. Peak force using conventional brakes can provide 4G retardation with a further 1G from the aero drag. Re-gen braking would likely be half that or less.Jolle wrote: ↑06 Mar 2021, 00:53Good for Le Mans or something, but not racy as open wheel racing. Having a feel for the brakes is one of those perks between drivers, one of the reasons front end re-gen isn’t introduced into F1, the “feel” of BBW is still not the same as an analog system.henry wrote: ↑06 Mar 2021, 00:42Well that would certainly extend the braking distances, which might be no bad thing. I would guess that peak braking effort might be halved at least.mzso wrote: ↑06 Mar 2021, 00:03If we're heading towards electrification. I wonder if it would make sense to allow cryo-cooling, or whether it would be prohibitively expensive and complicated to sustain, or have any real-world relevance for the foreseeable future.
I definitely would mandate direct drive. It would be an added challenge on motor design. But ultimately gears always add unreliability and inefficiency, plus there's nothing to develop there.
Ultimately I would move it forward 4WD as well, with re-gen braking only.