PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑06 Aug 2023, 20:48
@Mzso
Let's create a scenario for hot swapping..
Based on 2026 rules?
PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑06 Aug 2023, 20:48
Current rules.. Max 4MJ per lap deployment....
New rules max 8MJ per lap deployment.
2026 rules specify 9MJ recovery, unlimited deployment, per lap.
So, in effect, 9MJ deployment per lap.
PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑06 Aug 2023, 20:48
Current typical average battery capacity among teams ~ 10MJ (this is not limited by the rules so there is a weight to capacity trade-off).
New rules typical average battery capacity 16MJ.
Where are you getting those numbers?
PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑06 Aug 2023, 20:48
Lets say the maximum a car can charge on a lap with full harvest settings is 6 Megajoules at a loss of 2 seconds a racing lap.
To fully charge your new 16MJ battery you run three laps with charging. So a net defecit of 6 seconds race time.
The maximum harvest is 9MJ per lap.
The maximum storage is 4MJ (difference between maximum and minimum state of charger).
To get to a maximum state of charge of 16MJ the battery can have no less than 12MJ as its minimum state of charge.
If all energy recovered came during the braking phase then there would be, theoretically, no loss of time. There would also be no loss of time if the charging can be done with braking and part-throttle charging (burning fuel to charge the battery).
There will be some loss of time if charging has to happen on the straights (lift and coast, full throttle burning fuel to recharge).
PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑06 Aug 2023, 20:48
When this deployed the car can go 1 second a lap faster for two laps. This is on top of the normal 4MJ max deploy we have now. So in this case you go slower by focusing on charhing your battery during the race. (we sawthis is Spa when Lewis went into charging mode to get fastest lap).
It must also be noted that under the current rules the amount that can be deployed from the battery to the MGUK is twice that going in the other direction. So there is benefit in doing a charge lap, sacrificing a lap to make sure the next lap is started with the maximum possible charge.
For 2026 rules, the energy that can be recovered per lap is more than twice the energy that can be stored.
PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑06 Aug 2023, 20:48
Lets say a fresh battery at the pitstop adds 2 seconds to the pitstop. But now you have the full charge of battery. This fresh battery allows full deployment for a few laps so means you just gained a net 4 to 6 seconds of race time.
The 2026 rules specifically forbid adding energy to the battery in a pit stop (as do the current rules). Or at least limit it to a very small amount.
Even so, a fresh battery would allow 11s of full deployment before recharging is necessary. That is, 4MJ storage/350kW.