BorisTheBlade wrote: ↑04 Feb 2026, 20:59
Badger wrote: ↑04 Feb 2026, 19:22
BorisTheBlade wrote: ↑04 Feb 2026, 19:18
Not to be nitpicky, but I am 99,9% sure, that they will not lift and cost. Instead, they will use super-clipping (full-throttle-recovery), as this nets you the most energy per laptime-loss, so to say.
You can only do 250kW of "super-clipping", so it still makes sense to maximise the braking zone where you can get the full 350kW, and the way to do that is to elongate it. It will resemble something like LiCo with very strong engine braking.
Do we agree on the following? Cornering aside, there are really only two operating modes you want a racecar in, in order to get around a track as fast as you can. These are "applying maximum power" and "braking as late and as hard as you possibly can".
As this will not be possible for energy starved cars, you need to look to the next best options.
With super-clipping, you recover 250 KW and have 150 KW of forward power and have 30% drag reduction.
With your lift and coast (IMHO kind of a one-pedal-driving) you get 350 KW recovery, 0 KW forward power and 42% more drag.
Although to be 100% sure, calculations or even simulations would be needed. But simply looking at these numbers, I fail to see how the second one would be better for laptime. It is a bit like saying "if you brake less, you can drive through the corner faster".
Or am I missing something?
About the 350kW recovery under lift and coast, I'm not sure that is even possible, due to
C5.12.3: At any given engine speed, the minimum torque in the driver torque demand map must be a
negative value greater than the minimum curve defined as Torque (Nm) = −0.0027 * engine speed
(rpm) − 30.
That limits (as I understand this rule) the engine braking to less than 100kW. You could get more recovery from the MGU-K by running the ICE at positive power of course, but that does seem limited by the following rule:
C5.2.5: At partial load, the fuel energy flow must not exceed the limit curve defined below:
EF (MJ/h) = 380 when the engine power is equal to or below −50kW
EF (MJ/h) = 9.78 x engine power (kW) + 869 when the engine power is above −50kW
380 MJ/h would be ~13% of the maximal fuel energy flow, so you would not get much more than 50kW out of the ICE.
Basically you can get more recovery at full throttle than by lift and coast (IF that is true).
Maybe zero throttle does not count as partial load, but that would surprise me.