PlatinumZealot wrote:Mercedes are really running things here. Wow.. 1.5 up on ferrari.
My God.
Monza is a track where recharging the battery is focus. You don't get enough braking zones to get an easy charge. They must have found a way to charge using excess ice power (and hence fuel) in the traction limited zones. You dump more fuel there and you get more battery charge to use for the rest of the straight. Sort of a rapid switch in mguh harvest and deploy in a single straight. It is a thin line between traction control i think but guess since it is not used to control wheel spin directly the system is legal. Maybe the controller is reading the ground speed and the engine revs. Any slip detected out the corner the mguh is adjust to harvest more. I dunno... something like that.. My point is mercedes has more battery energy over the lap now.
Since the introduction of these rules I am thinking about this possibility. It is practically the same as traction control, but maybe they found a smart way to circumvent the rules. Btw, I think you mean MGU-K instead of MGU-H, because the MGU-K is directly coupled to the driveshaft, so when the ICE is delivering positive torque it can easily use some torque from the ICE to generated electricity. However, the energy flow from the MGU-K to the battery is limited, so this might give a benefit, but not a huge one.
I still think that the deployment of the MGU-H is where Mercedes has the biggest advantage. Their component sizes and control strategy is just better optimized than the rest of the manufacturers, which results in the most energy over a lap to propel the car.