Your example is not allowed at the measurement point, but is within the ES. They never measure the actual, physical, absolute SOC of the battery. They only measure the change.wuzak wrote: ↑10 Feb 2023, 11:525.4.8 The difference between the maximum and the minimum state of charge of the ES may not exceed 4MJ at any time the car is on the track.henry wrote: ↑10 Feb 2023, 10:04I was responding to @Stu’s estimation of how to size the battery. The “leak” is not compensated for by the K and H. The leak happens in the battery but the SOC is measured outside the battery and so can be compensated for by energy stored before the race begins.
While the SOC variation is fixed at 4MJ the maximum battery capacity change is SOC + leakage, 6MJ in my example. So to operate between 20 and 80% the battery capacity would need to be 6/.6, 10MJ.
Since we’re way off topic I’ll mention also that even though the 2026 regs have the same SOC requirement the battery capacity will likely be higher because the typical C rate will be much higher leading to higher losses during the race. The 2026 regs expect the ES to be heavier even though SOC is the same which supports this rationale.
To me that means the minimum o r maximum state of charge at any time of a race or practice session.
So you can't have min to max of 2MJ and 6MJ one lap and 1.5MJ and 5.5MJ on another lap.
There is a difference between the Physical State of charge (PSOC) , the energy actually in the Battery, and the SOC as measured and monitored for the regulations. The regulations measure the integral of energy into and out of the Energy Store. It’s at this measurement point that the SOC is established. Within the ES there are some losses but the regulations are such that the losses can be replaced by energy that is preloaded into the energy store.
As an example, suppose at the beginning of a lap the Battery has 8MJ PSOC. During the lap 2MJ goes in and 2MJ is extracted. The measured SOC change is Zero. But the PSOC will have reduced, let’s say by 2%, 40KJ. If you do this for 50 laps, the PSOC will have decreased by 2MJ, but you will still be able to vary the measured SOC by 4MJ on lap 51, if you wish, and the Physical battery capacity allows it.
To be honest the physical mass allowed in the regs would allow larger batteries than being discussed here and since it is a minimum mass you would think they would spec large batteries with attendant lower losses and hence cooling requirements.