venkyhere wrote: ↑01 Mar 2026, 14:15
Noob Q : the CAD drawings can be used to calculate geometric compression ratio. What 'temperature' is the CAD drawing meant for ?
I thought that was explained several times? You design, manufacture and measure/verify at the usual ISO, SAE or whatever norms, which have a defined ambient temperature. Anything else does not work.
This is the previous "ambient" check.
Stu wrote: ↑01 Mar 2026, 18:53
Farnborough wrote: ↑28 Feb 2026, 12:13
Anyone given any thought as to how the check @ 130C is going to be quantified ? Whats the tolerance on that temp level ? How is it maintained and measured ? Are the instruments of measurement also heated ? Do the have complicity a calibrated norm ? At what temperature would the measurement tools conform with their reference ? What is the reference used for this process ? Can it be reliably repeated on demand ?
That asks more questions than gives answers.
^^this^^
This creates a whole world of ‘legal’ arguments. Anyone that was around when Ferrari appealed a DSQ back in the late 90’s /early 00’s about how their barge boards were legal “depending upon how you looked at them” will see how it is possible to drive a bus through hot testing results.
I still think they will stay with CAD. As also CAD is equally for the ambient, the only really sensible test for CR in an environment and such a difficult engine like in F1. I still do not see anyone pouring liquid into a F1 engine trackside...and any dynamic tests would fail as they show effective CR, not geometric CR.
The most save test would be to define a FEM module, set it to 130°C and run it on all engines. As the teams define the CR measurement, I guess they will also define the FEM if this comes.
upsidedowntoast wrote: ↑01 Mar 2026, 18:59
If I recall correctly most other manufacturers could expect their PU to be 16:1 at ambient, down to 15.8 or 15.9 at operating.
There is still the question how everything comes together. I am still calculation down to a worst case of closer to 15:1. The 15.9 calculation comes from a wrong assumption, that only the piston stroke plays a role. But in fact the whole length down to the crankshaft is relevant.
SB15 wrote: ↑02 Mar 2026, 04:17
LM10 wrote: ↑01 Mar 2026, 21:36
Because Mercedes is known for caring for the spirit of the rules?
You say it like other teams are innocent saints

lmao

Funny conversation.
You might turn it around: If you are looking for a saint, maybe skip Toto
