WhiteBlue wrote:I should not have to repeat the facts for you.
The main breaking energy occurs on the front wheels which was never allowed to be harvested by the 2009 spec.
The power is only allowed to be applied by push to pass and not by dual torque.
There were deliberate restrictions in terms of energy and power which make no sense at all to an efficiency oriented system.
Without those limitations a much more meaningful system could have been achieved for all the money spent on KERS.
OK let's put things into perspective.
1) If you want to increase harvesting efficiency, you need to make much more powerful M/G unit. The power must be in the hundreds KW range. From what I read, I assume that best P/W ratio is around 5kW/kg. So, we're immediately talking about additional 20-40 kg unit immediately before driver's feet.
2) Another thing to consider is wires. If you need to transmit 100kW of electrical power to battery, you need a very meaty cable (and a damn high voltage, e.g. 100A/1000V).
IMO even this considerations put FW M/G units out of question unless drastic redesign (e.g. much more forward sidepods) is considered.
On the plus side I don't really understand obsession with FW M/G units. F1 cars use much more backward brake bias than regular cars. Even if bias is 60:40 you have plenty of braking power to harvest from rears only.
Dual torque system is fine. I believe, dual torque system with a current energy/power range (maybe 2-3 times higher, but not more than that) is what most realistic.