Elephant heads are engraved on the Mercedes pistons. I am not sure about Ferrari, maybe two stallions.shady wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 15:23I know youre right, when did we get information on the RA168-E it wasnt until recently, and it turns out its pretty classic in terms of most of its internal layout, some lighter and stronger materials, and special fuel. It will not be until these engines are retired that we will get a better picture. Right now for me, between HPP and Ferarri I want to see what their piston crowns look like..
The reason steel pistons work in big industrial engines is because they are large enough to acommodate internal oil galleries which can come very close to the ring lands. Even so they are still a nightmare to manufacture as they have to be either friction welded or forged with a wide flange at the top which is then bent 90 degrees down sealing off the gallery and effectively becoming the ring carrier.PlatinumZealot wrote: β12 Apr 2017, 01:59I thought steel pistons were only used in big diesel engines? If I am not mistaken, the publicly released media out there still say that steel pistons have oiling problems and need huge oil sprays to keep the ring landings cool, and that these oil spray are just to big and heavy for small engines. As far as I am aware the solution is not publicly out there... so whoever sees one in a car or motorcycle engine be sure to post the info.
It is typically pumped (more like sprayed at) in a bore in the under crown and it runs circumferentially, as close as possible to the ring lands. It then exits through a similar hole. I don t think any of it makes its way to the skirt, mainly due to oil consumption considerations but there would be nothing stopping youPlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Apr 2017, 02:40The only saving grace for F1 steel pistons is the small stroke. Meaning the piston does not travel far up the cylinder so maybe the piston skirt can be used like a pressurised oil gallery and cooling loop. The oil is pumped in at one side through a small bore and exits at the bottom of the skirt? Just an idea. I am no tribologist!
I know all that already. But what i describe is my version of a hypothetical steel F1 piston. Only an idea.Mudflap wrote: β14 Apr 2017, 07:53It is typically pumped (more like sprayed at) in a bore in the under crown and it runs circumferentially, as close as possible to the ring lands. It then exits through a similar hole. I don t think any of it makes its way to the skirt, mainly due to oil consumption considerations but there would be nothing stopping youPlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Apr 2017, 02:40The only saving grace for F1 steel pistons is the small stroke. Meaning the piston does not travel far up the cylinder so maybe the piston skirt can be used like a pressurised oil gallery and cooling loop. The oil is pumped in at one side through a small bore and exits at the bottom of the skirt? Just an idea. I am no tribologist!
from directing oil to the sides if you don t care about that.
Most of the development focus is on optimizing the gallery shape (maximizing the volume and surface area) as only a small percentage of gallery gets filled with oil - something like 30 % off the top of my head.
Mahle have sodium filled development pistons that they show at fairs - these have similar galleries but they are completely sealed and use the sodium rather then oil for moving heat away from crown and grooves.
Turbo is in the back.ScrewCaptain27 wrote: β14 Apr 2017, 14:48And here we finally have a full shot of the 2017 power unit:
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201704 ... bcdb1e.jpg
Is the Turbo and MGU-H configuration same as last year?PlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Apr 2017, 16:01Turbo is in the back.ScrewCaptain27 wrote: β14 Apr 2017, 14:48And here we finally have a full shot of the 2017 power unit:
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201704 ... bcdb1e.jpg
Yeah, they seem to run forward and then bend towards the rear. Very tight, but longer.PlatinumZealot wrote: β19 Apr 2017, 23:38The exhaust runners seem smaller diameter and longer than the competition - well at least the insulation does.
Are the fuel pumps electric or mechanically driven at these high pressures?