Are we still talking about Engine Delta P or something else. LOLxpensive wrote:The most boooring thing with all these self-appointed "web-engineers", is that they can never crack an original number on their own, but plenty of copy'n paste, catchwords, links and references....zzzz....
BMW favours steam made from exhaust heat (combined with IC engine cycle)xpensive wrote:Heat recovery without a turbo? Well, there's still about one third of the fuel's energy leaving though the xhaust so I guess they have to think of something, perhaps a turbo without the compressor-part?Tommy Cookers wrote:HERS without a turbo ?
How ??
I'm pretty sure you realised he is talking in gauge pressure.xpensive wrote:"So its 0 intake pressure"? Oh my, that's vacuum, I had no idea, are you sure about this?
They do indeed and the technology is interesting, but is it practical for F1 TC?Tommy Cookers wrote: BMW favours steam (combined with our IC engine cycle)
...
0 psig I fix it for ya web engineer policexpensive wrote:"So its 0 intake pressure"? Oh my, that's vacuum, I had no idea, are you sure about this?
Is there a electric compressor that can produce the flow numbers needed? If so how many kW would take for it to produce 50+ lbs./min of air flow?Tommy Cookers wrote:BMW favours steam made from exhaust heat (combined with IC engine cycle)xpensive wrote:Heat recovery without a turbo? Well, there's still about one third of the fuel's energy leaving though the xhaust so I guess they have to think of something, perhaps a turbo without the compressor-part?Tommy Cookers wrote:HERS without a turbo ?
How ??
Catalytic dissociation of fuel into combustible gas recovers heat and is more 21st century (see my post on the TERS thread ?)
recovery via an exhaust turbine in a N/A engine would allow a raised CR with the reduced VE (similar to Prius etc 'synthetic Atkinson cycle')
electrical load would need modulation to maintain constant back pressure
add a (small) electrically driven compressor to restore VE ?
The above numbers were for a full season.SeijaKessen wrote:Is that cost for the full allotment of engines for the season, or is it per engine?ESPImperium wrote:The cost of the V6s are rumoured to cost up to €30m a season, the current cost of the V8s are €8m a season. I think with the economic climate the V6s are stupid, id just get the V8s a updated KERS and HERS with the new ECU for a budget of €12m would be much more acceptable.
These V8s are vastly reliable, however id increase the RPM limit to 19,000 again just to add that extra spice into the mix, means there could be more engine penalties. If the KERS and HERS generated up to say 20 seconds of button activation per lap with 200kW of power, id be happy to add this in as well.
However i can also see a tightening of the fuel amounts per car per weekend reduced from almost 300litres to 250litres per car and a homologated fuel tank size come in with a tightening of the exhaust regulations to exclude chambers and hermoltoz technology as well.
The V8s i feel will be with us until 2015 or 2016 at the earliest.
Yup, numbers are for whole season for a single team, and that includes demo engines for their demo cars as well, so 16 engines per season for the teams two cars and a new capping of 5 engines for testing with another 3 for demo purposes.Pierce89 wrote:The above numbers were for a full season.SeijaKessen wrote:Is that cost for the full allotment of engines for the season, or is it per engine?ESPImperium wrote:The cost of the V6s are rumoured to cost up to €30m a season, the current cost of the V8s are €8m a season. I think with the economic climate the V6s are stupid, id just get the V8s a updated KERS and HERS with the new ECU for a budget of €12m would be much more acceptable.
These V8s are vastly reliable, however id increase the RPM limit to 19,000 again just to add that extra spice into the mix, means there could be more engine penalties. If the KERS and HERS generated up to say 20 seconds of button activation per lap with 200kW of power, id be happy to add this in as well.
However i can also see a tightening of the fuel amounts per car per weekend reduced from almost 300litres to 250litres per car and a homologated fuel tank size come in with a tightening of the exhaust regulations to exclude chambers and hermoltoz technology as well.
The V8s i feel will be with us until 2015 or 2016 at the earliest.