Right, the 2014 cars clearly get away much much better. It's only at the end of the straight when aero kicks in as the major issue that the old cars get back on terms. Clearly the 2014 cars are much more powerful.Juzh wrote:Not even close.
Right, the 2014 cars clearly get away much much better. It's only at the end of the straight when aero kicks in as the major issue that the old cars get back on terms. Clearly the 2014 cars are much more powerful.Juzh wrote:Not even close.
I note that the 2014 car you have chosen was 21st of 22 cars through the speed trap.Juzh wrote:2014 vs 2003
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VB_bRXMBIs8
2014 vs 2005
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a32A5SQj6m0
Not even close.
Thanks for the update, makes the weight fit much better on the chart now.inox wrote:Not perhaps so essential, but you got wrong weights for years 2000-2003. It was 600 kg back then (including the driver).
The 540 kg figure was from 1988, when turbo engines were penalized by 40 kg over the naturally aspirated cars. And that didn't yet include a driver on those days. The lowest weight limit since 80's has been 500 kg (without driver) so cars probably weighted in excess of 560 kg.
See table on page 8 on this rather handy sheet:
http://www.f1-forecast.com/pdf/F1-Files ... P2_01e.pdf
I think you may have interpreted that backwards.Moose wrote:Right, the 2014 cars clearly get away much much better. It's only at the end of the straight when aero kicks in as the major issue that the old cars get back on terms. Clearly the 2014 cars are much more powerful.Juzh wrote:Not even close.
I think that's all drag. At those speeds, weight it more or less irrelevant. For example...mrluke wrote:So from 70kph to 250kph the 2014 cars are quicker despite being 15% heavier. Do you still insist they are 200bhp down in power?
While that may be true of Barcelona, or any of the other common tracks, it is not the case for Monza.bhall II wrote:The current generation of cars create substantially less drag, especially at lower speeds. For instance, the older cars made more than their weight in downforce at ~100kph.
mrluke wrote: I note that the 2014 car you have chosen was 21st of 22 cars through the speed trap.
2014 car is marginally out of sync when they get out of T1. That's why he's ahead initially, but loses in the end. 2005 reks him easily.mrluke wrote: Despite this at the first gantry, 5 seconds in, 2014 is about a car length ahead of 2003. So from 70kph to 250kph the 2014 cars are quicker despite being 15% heavier. Do you still insist they are 200bhp down in power?
Because 2003 and 2005 cars take parabolica at such higher apex speeds comparison is not really worth it.mrluke wrote: Not sure why you chose this section of track rather than the start finish straight, despite the 100% throttle its difficult to gauge whether the 2014 car scrubs more speed through the corner.
"stable regs"mrluke wrote: Looking at the data more, Monza is a bit of an outlier, it stands out as being the only track where the pole laps have got increasingly slower even in times of "stable" regulations
2010 1:21.962
2011 1:22.275
2012 1:24.010
2013 1:23.755
2014 1:24.109
On most tracks the 2012 times are very comparable to 2010 but at Monza they are over 2 seconds slower. Im not sure why this could be. Sorry im going a bit off topic here
Working on the following assumptions;inox wrote:How is that possible? If we assumed current ICE power to be 700 hp and increase fuel flow by 10%, it would mean maximum output of 770 hp and probably slightly less due to added friction caused by extra revs. Revs itself don't add power, its the amount of burned fuel.stevesingo wrote:
Altenatively, a 10% increase in fuel flow and RPM limt of 12000 would get you over 800hp from the ICE alone.
Given the limited scope for engine development, wouldn't the basic designs have been future proofed? The manufacturers must have an engine power/torque development plan, that details where they were in 2014 and were they expect to be at the end of the engines development lifespan. So I'd expect many fundamental components to have been designed from the outset to withstand the expected power when development is completely frozen.Abarth wrote:They wouldn't be good engineers if they did not have designed these engines to the limit, and moreso the rotating/oscillating parts.
Using what heat content for the fuel and what efficiency for the ICE?stevesingo wrote:Working on the following assumptions;inox wrote:How is that possible? If we assumed current ICE power to be 700 hp and increase fuel flow by 10%, it would mean maximum output of 770 hp and probably slightly less due to added friction caused by extra revs. Revs itself don't add power, its the amount of burned fuel.stevesingo wrote:
Altenatively, a 10% increase in fuel flow and RPM limt of 12000 would get you over 800hp from the ICE alone.
100kg/hr fuel flow
10500rpm
VE of 120%
Equivilent N/A BMEP 14Bar
AFR 14:1
I calculate that a 1600cc engine will make 724hp @10500rpm @2.76Bar boost
12000rpm and 110kg/hr fuel flow gives 798bhp @2.66Bar boost.
Just to return on this.mrluke wrote: I note that the 2014 car you have chosen was 21st of 22 cars through the speed trap.
Code: Select all
Pos No Driver Time of Day Speed
1 6 Nico Rosberg 14:09:07 353.9
2 77 Valtteri Bottas 14:05:49 353.0
3 11 Sergio Perez 14:39:22 351.1
4 44 Lewis Hamilton 14:07:51 350.8
5 19 Felipe Massa 14:59:44 350.6
6 14 Fernando Alonso 14:59:24 350.1
7 7 Kimi Räikkönen 14:29:10 348.2
8 25 Jean-Eric Vergne 14:39:29 347.7
9 27 Nico Hulkenberg 14:03:47 347.3
10 26 Daniil Kvyat 14:39:46 347.2
11 22 Jenson Button 14:39:49 346.2
12 20 Kevin Magnussen 14:39:39 345.7
13 3 Daniel Ricciardo 14:10:57 345.3
14 1 Sebastian Vettel 14:10:34 345.0
15 13 Pastor Maldonado 14:04:46 341.9
16 21 Esteban Gutierrez 14:39:32 341.8
17 99 Adrian Sutil 14:07:37 340.6
18 17 Jules Bianchi 14:17:38 339.8
19 10 Kamui Kobayashi 14:11:00 339.5
20 4 Max Chilton 14:08:59 339.0
21 8 Romain Grosjean 14:17:40 338.7
22 9 Marcus Ericsson 14:17:51 334.7
Vmax is not nearly as affected by parabolica apex speed. And yet with DRS opened Rosberg only gets up 353. And it was you who brought up Ricciardo's 362, remember? I threw start/finish speed in as a caviat.mrluke wrote: Wasn't your whole initial point about how much faster the 03/04/05 cars were across the start finish straight and their vmax in particular? Its a shame that we cant make the adjustment to see what difference it would make if the 2014 cars could exit parabolica at the 03/04/05 cars speed or vice versa.
However it neatly reinforces my earlier point that the newer cars are much slower in the high speed corners so they must have some sort of advantage somewhere else.
But they're running race fuel. And raikkonen is running a 1 stop strategy. Weight difference almost negligible at this point.mrluke wrote: 850bhp in a 700kg car would be equivalent to ~730bhp in a 605kg car, i.e. if you removed 200bhp from a 2003 car you would get to 2014 levels of performance. Perhaps that is a little unfair of me.
They do, vs V8s.mrluke wrote: However it neatly reinforces my earlier point that the newer cars are much slower in the high speed corners so they must have some sort of advantage somewhere else.
2010 brazil qualy was wet. Hulk just managed to pull trough on slicks in the last seconds on a drying track, but is still only 2s off 2012 ultimate pace. Red bulls on inters are just 3s off pole from 2012. 2014 had new tarmac. Can't be compared.mrluke wrote: Monza
2004 1:20.089
2010 1:21.962
2012 1:24.010
2014 1:24.109
Montreal
2004 1:12.275
2010 1:15.105
2012 1:13.784
2014 1:14.874
Brazil
2004 1:10.646
2010 1:14.470
2012 1:12.458
2014 1:10.023
Suzuka
2004 1:33.542
2010 1:30.785
2012 1:30.839
2014 1:32.506
Renault have stated a lot of things since V6T came about. Very little of which turned out to be true.mrluke wrote: Renault have stated their PU makes 850bhp, Renault are clearly very down on power vs Ferrari and Mercedes.
At the risk of veering way off-topic...mrluke wrote:Bhall,
[...]
Perhaps this would explain why each year the cars have been getting slower at Monza than they have at other tracks (sorry for clumsy wording).
Because overall downforce reductions have reduced the scope in which teams can self-impose large, partial-lap restrictions, so to speak, lap times are relatively comparable for circuits that aren't necessarily downforce-critical. In those cases, the teams have mostly lost what was never needed in the first place and can now take advantage of higher top-speeds that were never feasible before. (The big difference is seen on so-called "aero tracks" where performance losses have been staggering.)mrluke wrote:Considering how little the lap times have increased for the increased weight I struggle to see how it can be possible that the cars have less power than before....
In general on the aero circuits the cars are slower but on the more power focused circuits the cars are setting very competitive times...
Melbourne 3.35%
Sepang 18.63%
Bahrain 3.03%
Shanghai 2.22%
Barcelona 13.44%
Monaco 2.10%