If Alonso was running a detuned engine, why did he have to do a lot of fuel saving?
Could it be that they had to alter the combustion for reliability purposes?
Yes. Comments have been made about this topic earlier in the forum.hemichromis wrote:If Alonso was running a detuned engine, why did he have to do a lot of fuel saving?
Could it be that they had to alter the combustion for reliability purposes?
Someone needs to get samples of the air and chuck them into a chromatograph.
Ah ok thanks, must have missed them. This is a fast moving topic!
Here's one they did earlier... (German DVL)Mudflap wrote: ↑26 Mar 2017, 15:46godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2017, 13:52Me thinks that's a blow off/relief valve.
Looks like the Honda engine has the same lack of electric power that plagued them in 2015. The McLaren chassis broke instead of the engine though which I found ironic.
I don't think so - the valve would have to be after the diffuser so that you don't have a long-ish open ended pipe post-compressor. That actuator clearly does something at the inlet and it looks an awful lot like this.
http://www.ihi.co.jp/compressor/en/img/ ... ial_02.jpg
https://image.slidesharecdn.com/1900ser ... 1306545805
True Craigy, a proper 'sniffer' test would be 'telling'... but oil is - amazingly- 'free' from F1 reg's proscription..Craigy wrote: ↑27 Mar 2017, 09:06Someone needs to get samples of the air and chuck them into a chromatograph.
For the record, burning Ethylene glycol (coolant) can smell like maple syrup in engines. It's one of the markers of head gasket failure.
Just like anything else, with a particularly cleverly designed set of gaskets it's possible that some nefarious engineer might design something that leaks only at certain pressures, and some of this stuff ends up being combusted.
Well now to be sure TC, if Craigy was goin' on the 'craic' & it was 'Oirish java' he was havin'..Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑27 Mar 2017, 10:45'fuel' formulation is also rather free from the FIA proscription .....
lead is limited to 5 mg/litre or something ..... but other similarly effective organometallics are not limited in this way
eg diethyl telluride or nickel carbonyl
anyway, can't some equivalent effect be developed in-cylinder rather than in-fuel ?
oil normally passes to-and-fro across the rings
some legitimate main fuel ingredients eg 'triptane' are an order of magnitude more responsive to OM than is our normal 'motor fuel'
btw permanent liver damage from glycol ingestion (vetinaries have shown) is preventable by treatment with suitably timed ingestion of ethanol
maybe the reason that glycol was added to wine by at least one European country
My municipality says as long as it's not full of rust, or dex-cool, to just dig a hole of at least 3ft in dirt and dump my used coolant there. Soil bacteria just treat the organic compounds as food. Used motor oil, no way that goes to the Auto Zone.J.A.W. wrote: ↑27 Mar 2017, 10:27True Craigy, a proper 'sniffer' test would be 'telling'... but oil is - amazingly- 'free' from F1 reg's proscription..Craigy wrote: ↑27 Mar 2017, 09:06Someone needs to get samples of the air and chuck them into a chromatograph.
For the record, burning Ethylene glycol (coolant) can smell like maple syrup in engines. It's one of the markers of head gasket failure.
Just like anything else, with a particularly cleverly designed set of gaskets it's possible that some nefarious engineer might design something that leaks only at certain pressures, and some of this stuff ends up being combusted.
As for that "maple syrup" analog, just don't be tempted to put it in your coffee, as a flavoursome sweetner..
Well, it is shorter straight than barcelona, with DRS Alonso goes 301km/h, and Ocon with DRS 320km/hHPD wrote: ↑27 Mar 2017, 13:41Where are the 30 km/h slower? or 120 HP less..
Minute 1:06 "bridge" (alonso releases the accelerator) and Ocon continues to accelerate
Enjoy the video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=junJlf8iy0M&t=16s