Ah OK, I definitely need a new TV then.Sulman wrote:
I thought there was far too much reverb, and all the midtones were clipped. This was an issue last year at some tracks; it sounds like the inside of a Pringles tin.

Ah OK, I definitely need a new TV then.Sulman wrote:
I thought there was far too much reverb, and all the midtones were clipped. This was an issue last year at some tracks; it sounds like the inside of a Pringles tin.
F1 is so poor on providing the public with data. Its ridiculous, if look at MotoGP. All the data is giving lap times, sector times, top-speeds, you just go to website click results and you can find data from every race. F1 is so secretive its getting f-ing annoying. The only info the give is the order of the session and the gap between the drivers..... why should fans pay for an app to get basic information that other series are giving away for free.....idfx wrote:Top speeds of cars?
This is BS. The team knows what the flow sensor is reading and what the engine is actually using. You acknowledge the difference and do not apply a correction factor to make the two numbers equal. What would be the point?thomin wrote: 11) A technical delegate of the FIA informed Red Bull that they would have to apply a correction factor to their own sensors (NOT the FFM!) in the injection system in order to comply with the rules, as the FFM monitors a slightly higher fuel flow than the Renault sensors. Since the Renault sensors are responsible for the ultimate amount of fuel that is injected, they needed to be adjusted.
I have a 12k sound system and they didn't sound anything like they do in the flesh!stuartpengs wrote:Ah OK, I definitely need a new TV then.Sulman wrote:
I thought there was far too much reverb, and all the midtones were clipped. This was an issue last year at some tracks; it sounds like the inside of a Pringles tin.
No, not what the flow sensor is reading and what the engine is actually using... What the flow sensor is reading, and what a different, non-official flow sensor is reading. In these circumstances you absolutely do tell the team "correct your flow sensor this much so that it matches the official one".hardingfv32 wrote:This is BS. The team knows what the flow sensor is reading and what the engine is actually using.thomin wrote: 11) A technical delegate of the FIA informed Red Bull that they would have to apply a correction factor to their own sensors (NOT the FFM!) in the injection system in order to comply with the rules, as the FFM monitors a slightly higher fuel flow than the Renault sensors. Since the Renault sensors are responsible for the ultimate amount of fuel that is injected, they needed to be adjusted.
Which is measured... by a flow sensor in the injectors. They don't magically know how much they're using, they have sensors.There is no Renault fuel flow sensor. Fuel flow is calculated based on what the fuel injectors are using.
Okay, you truly do just believe they're magical then?How often they are firing, for how long, etc. There is no sensor that can be adjusted to make the engine's actual flow 'look' like the FIA flow sensor.
This comes down to me compressing things I guess. You're absolutely right with everything you say. But it's not in disagreement with my summary. I tried to explain that the Renault sensor and the Renault injector are the same thing (see point #2). Maybe I failed, but I didn't want to make it too long and I thought it was obvious.hardingfv32 wrote:This is BS. The team knows what the flow sensor is reading and what the engine is actually using. You acknowledge the difference and do not apply a correction factor to make the two numbers equal. What would be the point?thomin wrote: 11) A technical delegate of the FIA informed Red Bull that they would have to apply a correction factor to their own sensors (NOT the FFM!) in the injection system in order to comply with the rules, as the FFM monitors a slightly higher fuel flow than the Renault sensors. Since the Renault sensors are responsible for the ultimate amount of fuel that is injected, they needed to be adjusted.
There is no Renault fuel flow sensor. Fuel flow is calculated based on what the fuel injectors are using. How often they are firing, for how long, etc. There is no sensor that can be adjusted to make the engine's actual flow 'look' like the FIA flow sensor.
Brian
It doesn't even matter what the "real" flow is. "Flow" is the "flow measured by the FIA device" which is the same for every team. So RedBull run on more fuel flow time to time than other teams which makes the disqualification perfectly reasonable.B) That although the sensor showed a difference in readings between runs in P1, it remains the homologated and required sensor against which the team is obliged to measure their fuel flow, unless given permission by the FIA to do
otherwise.
D) That regardless of the team’s assertion that the sensor was fault, it is not within their discretion to run a different fuel flow measurement method without the permission of the FIA.
Here you go mate. FIA publishes the times after the race. Don't go to f1.com for race information as they've never published full information. You can get everything apart from sector times for every lap though best sector times are available.kooleracer wrote:F1 is so poor on providing the public with data. Its ridiculous, if look at MotoGP. All the data is giving lap times, sector times, top-speeds, you just go to website click results and you can find data from every race. F1 is so secretive its getting f-ing annoying. The only info the give is the order of the session and the gap between the drivers..... why should fans pay for an app to get basic information that other series are giving away for free.....idfx wrote:Top speeds of cars?
How the F'k is any engine manufacturer supposed to get the max power and efficiency from their engines if the goal posts move every time they put a different FFM in their car?foxmulder_ms wrote:
It doesn't even matter what the "real" flow is. "Flow" is the "flow measured by the FIA device" which is the same for every team. So RedBull run on more fuel flow time to time than other teams which makes the disqualification perfectly reasonable.
Just... wat...erikejw wrote:Maybe FIA knew the fuel flow was below 100k but was afraid that the cars would not finish due to the Aussie circuits high fuel demand. especially Mercedes cars. F and R cars did not have that problem and had set up their cars for the limit but M would not reach the finish line. So FIA artificially lowered the fuel limit by changing sensor calibration. Hence Montezemolos disdain. Hence RBs refusal to agree. With 2 formation laps and a safety car, the mercs still needed lits of fuel saving. Hence the talk of 96 kg instead if 100.