PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑20 Jan 2026, 14:07
johnnycesup wrote: ↑20 Jan 2026, 03:53
I'm not the person you're replying to, but there's a 3000MJ/h limit to the fuel energy flow in the regulations. Now MJ/h (unit of mechanical work per unit of time) is obviously a unit of power, so 3000 MJ/h = 833 kW.
So considering the internal combustion engine can burn the fuel perfectly and nothing else is burned (so no oil burning shenanigans), a 470kW output is equivalent to 56,4% thermal efficiency. A bit optimistic IMO
EDIT:
Just to add to the previous discussion, using a common LHV for gasoline (44.3MJ/kg), the previous ruleset had a total fuel energy flow of 1230kW. If the 1000hp rumours are true, that would be a total thermal efficiency of 60,6%, which is pretty incredible.
Ok thank you. I see why you guys are wrong. Please have a look at the 2014 engine threads.
Engines do not work like that. You can't just pluck some numbers from the regulations and work backworks ( or rumours for that matter!).
You take numbers from a known physical engine or known physical/lab derived phenomena.
The previous rules had a fuel flow limit of 100kg/hr. This is equivalent to 4350 MJ/hr or 1230kW (note 4350 is higher than the 3000 number). The ICE engines (not the power unit!) as was calculated before by many forumers here is around 630kW. This smacks you sqaure at 52% thermal efficiency.
We know the combustion behaviour of these engines and we have estimated the MGUH and addition to efficiency and MGUK addition to output over 12 years of observation. So you use that and extrapolate. We do know that they were at limiting returns.
What you do, you see, is listen out when the season starts if you hear Mercedes shouting from the mountain tops of any record in thermal efficiency. They used to do this each year as the hybrid V6 developed because it was good for marketing their brand and the sport. And indeed those efficiency increases were genuine. With this new engine i am almost 100% sure that you will NOT hear any announcement on breaking any efficiency records.
Sorry, how are we wrong exactly?
The 1230 kW for the previous ruleset (2014-2025) was in my post before you replied and in the conditions I assumed (1000hp without need to use the battery), the thermal efficiency of the PU would absolutely be around 60,6%, and I stand by that number. If, as some people said here, the MGUH is only good for around 60kW, you'd get around 56% (probably closer to the truth), and if you want to completely disregard the electric part and say the ICE produces 630 kW, that corresponds to a efficiency of 51.2%, sure (I don't think that number tells the truth about that system).
Now in the current regulations (2026), a peak output of 470kW from the internal combustion engine would mean a thermal efficiency of at least 56% in that point, for sure. The only way it could be lower is if the incoming chemical energy into the system was higher than the number in the rules (so cheating).
I mean, if you think 470kW would mean an efficiency value (and without the MGUH that is not something with different interpretations) lower than 56% , would you please show your calculations?