Uncapped recovery under braking and getting rid of running the ICE to make electricity. The entire braking capacity should be performed by MGU. Mechanical brakes would only be available for emergency stopping if MGU failure occurs.
Making the racing worse is not a criteria (and has never stopped F1 before) so weight does not matter. If they want road relevance, they should go all the way. I think the F1 hybrids are only tangentially related to the road in their design and how they are used. Perhaps include an EV-only range component and maybe EV only in the pitlane and under safety car?wuzak wrote: ↑14 Apr 2024, 17:292) How much range?
Current battery rules allow for 4MJ per lap from 35kg ES, ~25kg of which is the actual batteries.
The actual storage capacity is probably 10Mj, or more. 10MJ would give ~28s at full power.
A Grand Prix is ~80-120 minutes.
The formula E battery has 51kWh (183.6MJ), weighs 284kg. Pit recharging is allowed (but not yet the planned 30s charging), and the races last 45 minutes.
Wait for the marketing materials.wuzak wrote: ↑14 Apr 2024, 17:29Nobody is claiming that the 2026 car is "electric".AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Apr 2024, 16:14What we have now for 2026 is burning petrol with ~48% thermal efficiency to make electricity so that we may claim that our cars are "electric" . The reason they are using less fuel is not because efficiency increased appreciably, but instead because they just cut the fuel flow in the regs and said "good luck" to the people responsible for the chassis regs...
You can already find this in F1.com
https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... ytVVYjz2Z5Environmental sustainability – the 2026 power unit will include an increase in the deployment of electrical power to up to 50% and utilise a 100% sustainable fuel
https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... Mes0c8M9kcNew power unit rules introduced for 2026 will see a move to 50% internal combustion and 50% electrical power together with the use of 100% sustainable fuels.
It's a deceiving way of explaining things.
They are using less fuel because the PU regulations tell you how much fuel to use and it is simply less. While active aero would be desirable in any sustainability/efficiency campaign, it has only become a discussion point after the PU regulations were produced and it was believed that there would be deficiencies in the racing/entertainment.
The way they have gone about this seems a bit halfhearted? What are they doing on the logistics side where most of F1's carbon footprint lies? Where are the electric transporters and electric safety cars?
I think F1 should decide what it wants to be and go full send in that way. We seem to be in a strange middle ground that optimizes nothing?