I tried to run some numbers as to the energy recovered from MGU-K. I used China (as this was supposed to be a track slightly favouring the hybrid system) and Hamilton Quali lap telemetry from f1insightshub.com (I wanted to use Mercedes as an example, but unfortunately both of them had some glitches in the telemetry).
I used the change in speed, when the brakes were applied to calculate the kinetic energy expended (assuming mass of 770kg). Now, I assumed 55-45 brake bias, so the rear wheels could recover only 45% of that, while MGU-K being capped at 350kW.
However, I didn't include any effect of the drag on the braking force.
The result is that the total recovered energy from the MGU-K is 3,5 MJ (from the total recoverable 10,5 MJ). Mercedes had higher straight line speeds, so for them that figure could be just over 4,0 MJ. It still is less than half of the permissable recovery (9MJ for quali).
I mean, I know that the data and my calculations are inaccurate, but I doubt it was greatly more than that.
Superclipping at 250kW would roughly add 3MJ to that and that would leave 2,5 MJ for partial throttle recovery.
Would the teams change the brake bias to favor energy recovery?
Interestingly, a 150kW front MGU-K could recover 2,2 MJ and 220 kW would be needed to offset superclipping.
