Good point. Then it makes sense why they tried to increase recovery intensity numerous times.
Good point. Then it makes sense why they tried to increase recovery intensity numerous times.
The radius of a straight line is not zero but instead goes towards infinity.niccoaero wrote: ↑08 Mar 2023, 14:05
I tried to find the Radius (R) with the following formula: k=(x'y'' - y'x'') / (x'^2 + y'^2)^(3/2) et R = 1/k, but I think that something is wrong because no '0' values for the Radius come out when the car is running on a straight line. Could you please explain better how you handle this?
My understanding is that there are 3 basic modes depending on the driver demand.ME4ME wrote: ↑09 Mar 2023, 11:45Question regarding the regulations on this:
Do we assume that MGU-K generator-mode engages only once the driver hit the brake padel or might it be pre-programmed to engage once the driver backes off the throttle at the end of the straight?
Honestly haven't kept up-to-date on the regulations on that kind of level, but i'd recall that certainly early on in these PU regulations there was quite a lot of room for trickery. Car knowing where it is on track. Alonso's Mclaren-Honda doing weird stuff through Pouhon at Spa.
Point is, if pre-programming is allowed, which basically emulates electric car's one-pedal-driving, than the loss of recovered energy would only be equal to the delta kinetic energy (for ex. 310 km/h vs 300 km/h) (..caused by less deployment) times the recovery systems' efficiency.
What you saw was RB protecting their gearbox. Confirmed by wazari in RB thread. Nice spotVanja #66 wrote: ↑08 Mar 2023, 16:52Here's something interesting, Max was slower on all straights in the first stint than other two, did not go over 302kmh on the main straight in the first stint from what I saw. Later he was around 306-310, all with DRS off and no slipstream of course.
Perez didn't do this and neither did any other driver in any other car. Was that a setting to be slower on acceleration with full-fuel car to preserve tyres better? I didn't see noticeable difference in throttle % on f1-tempo.
https://i.ibb.co/XWRnJmt/BAH-23-top-speed.jpg
Ah, good, we have the explanation, thanks!
"We do assume that MGU-K generator mode engages only once the driver hits the brake pedal'' Yes we assume that in accordance with the intended rules of ERS, as otherwise it would be energy that would go to waste. But ... certainly ... there was quite a lot of trickery.... Yes there was, that is why the rule makers enforced the second in-out MGU-K policing sensor.henry wrote: ↑10 Mar 2023, 10:29My understanding is that there are 3 basic modes depending on the driver demand.ME4ME wrote: ↑09 Mar 2023, 11:45Question regarding the regulations on this:
Do we assume that MGU-K generator-mode engages only once the driver hit the brake padel or might it be pre-programmed to engage once the driver backes off the throttle at the end of the straight?
Honestly haven't kept up-to-date on the regulations on that kind of level, but i'd recall that certainly early on in these PU regulations there was quite a lot of room for trickery. Car knowing where it is on track. Alonso's Mclaren-Honda doing weird stuff through Pouhon at Spa.
Point is, if pre-programming is allowed, which basically emulates electric car's one-pedal-driving, than the loss of recovered energy would only be equal to the delta kinetic energy (for ex. 310 km/h vs 300 km/h) (..caused by less deployment) times the recovery systems' efficiency.
If the driver demand is part throttle the ERS adds or subtracts energy to the ICE output to match the demand.
If the driver demand is full throttle the ERS adds or subtracts energy to the ICE depending on the strategy system’s understanding of what is needed. It’s this system that may have lead to the Alonso situation. There are many parameters that will be taken into account for this, SOC, wind direction and speed, position on track etc., including the driver override of the overtake button.
If the driver demands braking the ERS subtracts energy from the kinetic energy of the car to supplement the physical brakes.
So lift and coast, in which is no demand from the driver, does not involve the ERS. As you say, the thing it does affect for the ERS is the total kinetic energy available to be harvested. Shorter stopping time means less energy can be harvested. The kinetic energy is reduced at the rate of the drag power of the car and the recovery portion at the K power proportion of that, 120kW.
You keep repeating this error. You equate marketing and publicity material with rules.saviour stivala wrote: ↑16 Mar 2023, 08:30"We do assume that MGU-K generator mode engages only once the driver hits the brake pedal'' Yes we assume that in accordance with the intended rules of ERS, as otherwise it would be energy that would go to waste. But ... certainly ... there was quite a lot of trickery.... Yes there was, that is why the rule makers enforced the second in-out MGU-K policing sensor.henry wrote: ↑10 Mar 2023, 10:29My understanding is that there are 3 basic modes depending on the driver demand.ME4ME wrote: ↑09 Mar 2023, 11:45Question regarding the regulations on this:
Do we assume that MGU-K generator-mode engages only once the driver hit the brake padel or might it be pre-programmed to engage once the driver backes off the throttle at the end of the straight?
Honestly haven't kept up-to-date on the regulations on that kind of level, but i'd recall that certainly early on in these PU regulations there was quite a lot of room for trickery. Car knowing where it is on track. Alonso's Mclaren-Honda doing weird stuff through Pouhon at Spa.
Point is, if pre-programming is allowed, which basically emulates electric car's one-pedal-driving, than the loss of recovered energy would only be equal to the delta kinetic energy (for ex. 310 km/h vs 300 km/h) (..caused by less deployment) times the recovery systems' efficiency.
If the driver demand is part throttle the ERS adds or subtracts energy to the ICE output to match the demand.
If the driver demand is full throttle the ERS adds or subtracts energy to the ICE depending on the strategy system’s understanding of what is needed. It’s this system that may have lead to the Alonso situation. There are many parameters that will be taken into account for this, SOC, wind direction and speed, position on track etc., including the driver override of the overtake button.
If the driver demands braking the ERS subtracts energy from the kinetic energy of the car to supplement the physical brakes.
So lift and coast, in which is no demand from the driver, does not involve the ERS. As you say, the thing it does affect for the ERS is the total kinetic energy available to be harvested. Shorter stopping time means less energy can be harvested. The kinetic energy is reduced at the rate of the drag power of the car and the recovery portion at the K power proportion of that, 120kW.
Hello, I'm new to the forum and I was trying to replicate these charts as an excercise, but what I get is a series of points that differ significantly from these results. I believe my main issues lie in data preparation (combining the car data with the position data) and the calculation of derivatives. Could someone help me understand where I am doing wrong? Feel free to ask for any clarification.hollus wrote: ↑03 Mar 2023, 22:46BigBeansBoy wrote: ↑27 Feb 2023, 07:15Hello all, I don't know if this thread is the perfect place for this analysis so please let me know if it should be moved.
I was heavily inspired by @F1DataAnalysis on twitter to try to dig into the numbers to get a better look at how Mclaren is looking. This is admittedly my first attempt at analyzing F1 telemetry data, so if I've made any mistakes feel free to correct, I can also provide any information regarding how values are calculated.
For all analyses here I'm looking at Norris, Perez, and Hamilton. If anyone wants to see any particular comparison please request!
Firstly, we're going to look at the speed, longitudinal acceleration (positive means foot on the gas, negative means slamming on the brakes), and lateral acceleration (related to mechanical grip with the assumption that the drivers are on the edge). All of these are in relation to distance along the track.
https://i.imgur.com/r4n0PYS.png
Starting with the main straight, top speed for Norris is 317kph compared to Perez's 319kph and Hamilton's 315kph.
We can see in the speed plot that the 3rd major braking point loses Norris a lot of time. I'm not including the figure here, but Piastri is very similar. (Though I should note he actually holds on to it a little better and where Norris' speed drops he's able to keep it steady. Both are still very off Hamilton/Perez.)
Additionally, at the 6th and 8th braking points the minimum speed going through the corner is notably lower.
Before diving into the longitudinal and lateral acceleration I think it's useful to look at them plotted with respect to each other:
https://i.imgur.com/STNO83Q.png
Here the data points create a shape narrower than the other drivers. Peak lateral acceleration occurs in high speed corners so that's likely where the Mclaren is lacking the most.
The max braking performance looks surprisingly good. So surprisingly I'm curious if it's an issue from the telemetry data. I did a fair amount of smoothing to remove weird artifacts, but it might not have been perfect. I think it's important to remember this caveat when looking at all of these figures.
Lastly, I want to include this figure showing the velocity and lateral acceleration plotted against each other. I'm not entirely sure what conclusions can be drawn from this, but I think it's interesting to look at:
https://i.imgur.com/uovqDv9.png
If anyone has any requests for other data/drivers to look at let me know!
Basing this kind or comparison on a heavy fuel lap is nonsense. Conditions and purposes could be completely different.venkyhere wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 12:53https://i.imgur.com/VZcNtwV.jpeg
I dont know how crude or naive these inferences are, I welcome corrections.
The white circles show RedBull sandbagging, relative to Ferrari - tremendous amount of lift-n-coast, before hitting the brakes (T10 seems to be the exception where Max is very gentle on the brakes instead of lift-n-coast -ing).
Green (T6+T7) and Yellow (T12) circles show how the RB20 is able to hit the A-pedal much quicker than Ferrari in these medium/high speed turns. Both cars with the same laptime, RedBull making up all the sandbag-loss, in just two corners.
Ferrari seem to be the "fastest of the rest" and LeClerc is an excellent driver (probably the only one who is upto VER/HAM level). If this is anything to go by, come Silverstone/Suzuka with plenty of fast/medium speed corners, the RedBull is probably going to have a 0.8-1.0 advantage over the field.
If you notice the white circles and the 'upslope' of the speed plots leading up to it :AmateurDriver wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 13:57Basing this kind or comparison on a heavy fuel lap is nonsense. Conditions and purposes could be completely different.