So a 99% efficient motor can go above 120KW output?
Correct.
Sounds like a place to spend huge money for minute competitive advantage.Tzk wrote: ↑27 Jan 2019, 01:21In theorie yes, but one should assume that they won‘t reach these efficiencies. Even if gears, motor and controller are each 98% efficient, that‘d result in a total efficiency of 95%.
Gear efficiency of 98 to 99% should be realistic. Motor itself is probably around 95 to 97 too. And the controller is probably also around 95%. So overall 95...
In case those numbers are right, in the upper cases leaves an efficiency near 91%, because the motor only gets profit of the net power of the controller. The same applies for motor and gear train.
That sounds awesome! Dat torque with no traction control would have epic corner exits!Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 22:41because the MGU-K is chosen to be the car's second engine - they want car racing with some added gizmos
sustained PU peak power comes from the fuel rate limit plus the K power limit
if K power etc was delimited they could run an ICE for 95 min at 400 kw and variably motor the K at up to 1000 kw
that would be like 1000 kW FE
To clarify this: i guessed these numbers based on realworld numbers. 98-99% efficiency for straight cut gears is a common value.BassVirolla wrote: In case those numbers are right, in the upper cases leaves an efficiency near 91%, because the motor only gets profit of the net power of the controller. The same applies for motor and gear train.
0,99 x 0,97 x 0,95 = 0,91
9% of 126kw sounds like a meaningful number in F1.
The regulations are such that the only real area to explore for performance gains is in the wind tunnel. So we have teams spending huge amounts of time and money making and refining aerodynamic bits to put on an F1 car, which has zero utility beyond the objective of making an F1 car go a tiny bit faster.Zynerji wrote: ↑27 Jan 2019, 03:32Sounds like a place to spend huge money for minute competitive advantage.Tzk wrote: ↑27 Jan 2019, 01:21In theorie yes, but one should assume that they won‘t reach these efficiencies. Even if gears, motor and controller are each 98% efficient, that‘d result in a total efficiency of 95%.
Gear efficiency of 98 to 99% should be realistic. Motor itself is probably around 95 to 97 too. And the controller is probably also around 95%. So overall 95...
It's the same F1 that we all know and love...