where are you getting this from?JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Mercedes have apparently moved Their KERS units under the fuel tanks.
Where was it placed before then?JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Mercedes have apparently moved Their KERS units under the fuel tanks.
JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Mercedes have apparently moved Their KERS units under the fuel tanks.
This!JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:@ metalrulz
Installing KERS as low as possible is the defacto route IMO.
Reason is KERS will never get lighter during a race. So that mass needs to be stored as low and central as possible.
Designing a fuel tank to accomadate the idea properly is the real trick.
The reason the W02's KERS was stored high up, was so that the car could have its short wheel base, a fundamental philosophy behind the car.
ScarbsF1 Craig Scarborough
KERS Battery pack it was in the sidepod now goes under the fuel tank
11 hours ago Favorite Retweet Reply
ScarbsF1 Craig Scarborough
Relative position of the 2009 & 2011 Mercedes KERS battery pack yfrog.com/oeac6kpj
11 hours ago
1) Batteries are more dense than even fuelMetalrulz wrote:JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Mercedes have apparently moved Their KERS units under the fuel tanks.
Won't that increase the height of the fuel tank and also increase the center of gravity AGAIN ? something tells me that they actually want to save space by going for a tight packaging again to keep the wheelbase as short as possible. It will be longer than the W02 but will be the shortest car on the grid again....
beelsebob wrote: 1) Batteries are more dense than even fuel
2) By moving them out the side pod they'll be lowering the radiators, which probably also have a greater density than fuel.
They don't need to – they need to have a higher mass than the same volume of fuel as they take up. The fuel isn't moving up above where it was before – it's moving up above the KERS unit.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:beelsebob wrote: 1) Batteries are more dense than even fuel
2) By moving them out the side pod they'll be lowering the radiators, which probably also have a greater density than fuel.
But the batteries don't have a mass of 180kgs however dense they are.
James Allen wrote:An update on the Lotus ride height system: Giorgio Piola, who broke the story earlier this week has written that Mercedes are also working on a version of it. Bob Bell moved from Renault to Mercedes in the last 12 months and has hired one of the engineers behind the system.
Mercedes have announced that they will be late releasing the new car, missing the first test and the speculation is that the delay is due partly to this system but also partly to a delay in the complicated F Duct front wing, which they tried out in practice in Japan.