The MGU-K is allowed to deliver maximum of 200 NM of torque. When coupled with a turbo engine delivering close to 400 Nm you get a total of 600 Nm to put down to pavement.dren wrote:
Drivers are talking about the power units already being quite strong which leads me to believe they are in the ballpark of last year's numbers.
Well I believe those numbers do not count regeneration, and the engine part of the power unit will produce about 580-600 bhp by itself (say the MGU-K is broken for some reason) but we'll agree to disagree apparently.321apex wrote: As I pointed out, those figures of 220 g/kw-hr include regeneration. Which misses completely our discussion of "piston only" BSFC. My original argument was that the "piston only" power will be seriously limited to not much more than 500HP due to this stingy fuel flow limit.
About the transmission, in the "2014 transmissions" thread http://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewto ... 2&start=30 there is a very good analysis by rscsr, using those Cosworth engine curves. According to that, the 8 gears would be almost unneeded given the flat power band of the 2014 engines (according to the Cosworth graphs once again)321apex wrote:
Any thoughts on this?
tuj wrote:I heard statements from the teams that they felt like they could get good optimization for all the tracks with 8 gears, with Monaco using only 1-7 and Monza using 2-8.
it is not the engine torque that is important, it is the torque at the wheels321apex wrote:The MGU-K is allowed to deliver maximum of 200 NM of torque. When coupled with a turbo engine delivering close to 400 Nm you get a total of 600 Nm to put down to pavement.dren wrote:
Drivers are talking about the power units already being quite strong which leads me to believe they are in the ballpark of last year's numbers.
I don't know how much torque 2013 KERS was allowed to deliver, but if we compare torque capability in 2013, when the V8 engines were making about 300Nm and assuming KERS was around 150Nm, then you get a total of maybe ~ 450Nm.
So in 2014 this is roughly a 30% torque increase with harder, less grippy tires and less downforce. It may be the year when men are separated from the boys.
I would like to respectfully point out to you, that you have not read my post, or at least your comment does not reflect the true content of my post. In it at the beginning I used the following phrase: "....to put down to pavement.", which should have made it quite clear what exactly I meant.langwadt wrote:it is not the engine torque that is important, it is the torque at the wheels321apex wrote:The MGU-K is allowed to deliver maximum of 200 NM of torque. When coupled with a turbo engine delivering close to 400 Nm you get a total of 600 Nm to put down to pavement.dren wrote:
Drivers are talking about the power units already being quite strong which leads me to believe they are in the ballpark of last year's numbers.
I don't know how much torque 2013 KERS was allowed to deliver, but if we compare torque capability in 2013, when the V8 engines were making about 300Nm and assuming KERS was around 150Nm, then you get a total of maybe ~ 450Nm.
So in 2014 this is roughly a 30% torque increase with harder, less grippy tires and less downforce. It may be the year when men are separated from the boys.
more torque at a lower rpm must be matched with a higher gear so at the wheels it will probably come out about the same
the 84% Toluene/16% Heptane fuel is AFAIK 41.2 MJ/kg LHVwuzak wrote:The Honda RA168E made 620hp with BSFC of 272g/kWh with fuel that had ~43MJ/kg LHV, @ 12,000rpm.
You are making a valiant effort.wuzak wrote:The Honda RA168E made 620hp with BSFC of 272g/kWh with fuel that had ~43MJ/kg LHV, @ 12,000rpm.
If we take that back to 600hp, the BSFC required is 263g/kW/hr. Up the LHV to 45MJ/kg and you now require a BSFC of 252g/kW/hr. Now you only need a 5% improvement from friction, DI, materials and design to get to the 240g/kW/hr shown in Cosworth's graphs.
Then I don't get it please explain; one engine makes ~450nm@17000rpm, other ~600nm@11000rpm, to run the same speed they need different gear ratios, so in the end the torque at the wheels is about the same321apex wrote:I would like to respectfully point out to you, that you have not read my post, or at least your comment does not reflect the true content of my post. In it at the beginning I used the following phrase: "....to put down to pavement.", which should have made it quite clear what exactly I meant.langwadt wrote:it is not the engine torque that is important, it is the torque at the wheels321apex wrote:
The MGU-K is allowed to deliver maximum of 200 NM of torque. When coupled with a turbo engine delivering close to 400 Nm you get a total of 600 Nm to put down to pavement.
I don't know how much torque 2013 KERS was allowed to deliver, but if we compare torque capability in 2013, when the V8 engines were making about 300Nm and assuming KERS was around 150Nm, then you get a total of maybe ~ 450Nm.
So in 2014 this is roughly a 30% torque increase with harder, less grippy tires and less downforce. It may be the year when men are separated from the boys.
more torque at a lower rpm must be matched with a higher gear so at the wheels it will probably come out about the same
Please read more carefully b4 you post critical remarks.
Most obviously you wanted to make a point about the RPM drop and it is a good point to make.hollus wrote:Apex, you are forgetting to add IMHO to most of your posts (IMHO).
Please answer a very simple question: What happens immediately after your driver shifts one gear up while running at 10500 RPM?
The remarks made by drivers concerned exit from corners, when they were accelerating. Usually at that point it is the net force trying to push the car forward that may or may not break the traction and it is torque that does itlangwadt wrote:
Then I don't get it please explain; one engine makes ~450nm@17000rpm, other ~600nm@11000rpm, to run the same speed they need different gear ratios, so in the end the torque at the wheels is about the same
How is that more at the pavement?