FW17 wrote: ↑01 Jul 2021, 15:38
But can they make a turbo engine weigh less than what it does now?
Even if it was an inline-four like the original FIA world engine plan it would weigh less, wouldn't it?
A V4 should weigh less than a V6 too, but to a lesser extent.
Jolle wrote: ↑01 Jul 2021, 17:22
Dissipating the same amount of (heat) energy over half the surface area is a challenge and would make everything a lot hotter inside the engine.
The 1.05 V4 would only produce 1.05/1.6 times as much power though (with fuel flow reduced from 110 kg/hour to ~72 kg/hour).
So about 550hp (down from 840hp?), with 450hp from the electrical system instead of just 160 hp from the electrical system.
If they are planning to keep a V6 (as they seem to be saying), I don't quite understand how they are going to be able to increase electrical power "significantly" while keeping the total power output the same?
Jolle wrote: ↑01 Jul 2021, 23:34
Lowering the fuel flow does (and could be done cheaply with the current engines as base, you just need a smaller compressor for less boost).
So they will keep the engines the same, but just lower the fuel flow?
Won't less energy going through the combustion engine make them sound even worse though, in direction contradiction to the goal of a "more emotive" power unit?
mzso wrote: ↑02 Jul 2021, 09:53
Adding "cars must not be longer than 4.5m" to the regulations would accomplish length reduction much more simply, and with a lot more certainty.
Given the maximum length of the front and rear overhangs is specified, what difference does it make compared to just giving a maximum wheelbase (as the 2022 rules will do instead)?