wuzak wrote: ↑06 May 2026, 06:00
diffuser wrote: ↑06 May 2026, 03:29
The new gen 4 will still be at F2 level but it is getty more interesting. They're getting fast charging that can charge 20% of the battery in 30 seconds. You can force 2 pit stops and top up the battery 40%. Wasn't too long ago that F1 was refueling on the fly. Plus 700 kw recharging under braking.
Gen 4 battery size is 55kWh.
20% of that is 11kWh.
To recharge that in 30s is 1,320kW, more than double the charge rate for Gen 3.
Let's say that the battery can be recharged 20% twice in a race, for a total of 140% battery capacity for the race.
That is 77kWh.
Assuming an average power output half of the nominal output of 450kW. So 225kW.
The time that they can race is 77kWh/225kW = 0.3422 hours. Or 20.5 minutes!
The amount they can recover from braking depends on the track.
The tracks they have run on have lots of braking zones. But these they will run on proper tracks with less braking recovery possible - and higher power usage.
If you assume double the time thanks to energy recovery, that's still less than half a GP distance.
Let's take Australia for example.
It was really bad for the 2026 PU regulations. It would also be for FE.
F1 braking is about 8s of 80s lap. Let's say 12s for heavier FE car.
F2 lap time is about 90s.
Assume that for FE as well, plus the 225kW average output.
225kW * 90s = 20.25MJ.
Braking recovery: 12s * 700kW = 8.4MJ
Battery consumption per lap: 20.25MJ - 8.4MJ = 11.85MJ
Total Battery allowance = 77kWh = 277.2MJ
Number of laps = 277.2MJ/11.85MJ = 23.4 laps.
F2 ran 23 laps, just under 40 minutes, in race 1 and 33 laps, just under 1 hour, in race 2.
F1 race is 58 laps.
In refuelling era, the tank could be filled in around 10-12s, good enough for more than half the race.