henry wrote: ↑25 Jul 2018, 10:58
I made a very simple simulation. Two cars, same mass, same drag.
Car A 700kW accelerates From 150kph to 320kph in 5.44 secs over 389m
Car B 670kW accelerates from 150kph to 316kph in 5.50 secs over 389m
Even with a 30kW advantage it would take 8 such events to gain 0.5 seconds.
I also looked at 250kph as the lower speed, which it has been suggested is Andy Cowell’s number. As might be expected the time differences are very small.
I think to gain 0.5 seconds over 3 or 4 straights probably needs more than just a 30kW advantage.
My model is very crude, I’ve not allowed transmission loss for instance, but I think it’s in the right ballpark.
You must do one more time this model. And the reason is considering that after 200km/h (in Merc`s case) Ferrari is reaching their top speed earlier hence their gain on the straight must be due to staying at that top speed for longer than Merc. In addition to that on that speed graph we could see that their car arrives sooner at on top speed. So, it`s a double gain but mostly it comes down to staying longer rather than reaching sooner that top speed.
We know that due to Shell investments in combustion with TJI, HCCI and so on now they are ahead both in fuel and combustion development area. Considering that MGU-K kicks in after 100km/h and could deliver constant and equal power for both cars, Ferrari being able to reach sooner their top speed means they have more HP coming out from ICE, I think. Staying longer on deployment means they have a different schedule for both straights and the start of the race. Most teams spend their deployment on corner exit and on the straights but it seems that now Ferrari is spending more time deployment onto the latter hence their time again. And the reason for that is they have an advantage both in traction and higher downforce levels (due to their RW having more AoA) which allows them to use no or less electric power out of the corners. That means they have a better MGU-H relying more often on harvesting enough power just to ignore K harvesting, as we could easily see in the braking area their rain light blinks less often than Merc one.
Their 0.5 sec/lap advantage, as Toto said, couldn`t be down to that 40HP for the reason it`s not enough regardless the track they are racing. More credible is that time gain but it must be said that it could be achieved only in Q3 PU mode, coz had they could sustain it also in the race than they would easily win the race with at least a 30 sec. gap … So further pursuing this logic that could be explained only had Ferrari is the first team that could sustain now 160HP constantly on the whole qualify lap and intermittently in the race. I know that there are other opinions regarding this matter and we would be glad if someone could have some proof (not that I have one
) to back his/her … …
Now regarding fuel, unfortunately, there are very few chemists around here as I`ve noticed since some years ago. Every time we speak about fuel in everybody`s mind it`s all about HP. But nobody has considering other aspects such as how much time they could gain had the fuel lowers its density. That`s the real deal and the area of development now. Just imagine a 5% decrease in density from 105kg fuel allowed. That means 99,75kg. And bearing in mind that for 10kg of fuel means 0.35-0.4 sec/lap – track dependent – then when a car starts with 5kg less fuel it could gain some 0,15-0.2 sec/lap …