Ferrari blongs with 90% to Fiat Chrysler, and Fiat Chrysler are producing as many cars as Renault and Daimler AG (Mercedes) together.
If Fiat Chrysler really wants, they could easily put on the table comparable business potential to help Ferrari.
They do not have the R&D of Renault nor Daimler.Abarth wrote:Ferrari blongs with 90% to Fiat Chrysler, and Fiat Chrysler are producing as many cars as Renault and Daimler AG (Mercedes) together.
If Fiat Chrysler really wants, they could easily put on the table comparable business potential to help Ferrari.
How many hybrid cars does Chrysler Fiat sell in a year?Abarth wrote:Ferrari blongs with 90% to Fiat Chrysler, and Fiat Chrysler are producing as many cars as Renault and Daimler AG (Mercedes) together.
If Fiat Chrysler really wants, they could easily put on the table comparable business potential to help Ferrari.
F1 can live without Ferrari, and Ferrari can do without F1. The whole symbiosis thing is taken way overboard in my view.321apex wrote:Corollary to my Ferrari statement, I will offer you this imponderability.
If what I said is close to being correct, then Ferrari will find it hard to succeed in hybrid F1.
If Ferrari can not win, they may/will cease to participate.
If Ferrari stops racing in F1 what will happen to F1 without them ?
If you are on the same page as I am, then the only way out is for F1 to somewhat "back track" on technology.
Thanks for sharing this link.FoxHound wrote:F1 can live without Ferrari, and Ferrari can do without F1. The whole symbiosis thing is taken way overboard in my view.321apex wrote:Corollary to my Ferrari statement, I will offer you this imponderability.
If what I said is close to being correct, then Ferrari will find it hard to succeed in hybrid F1.
If Ferrari can not win, they may/will cease to participate.
If Ferrari stops racing in F1 what will happen to F1 without them ?
If you are on the same page as I am, then the only way out is for F1 to somewhat "back track" on technology.
As for the tech, they already have some recovery systems on their production cars. Developed by the F1 guys at Gestione Sportiva according to Top Gear for the La Ferrari. Or is it just La Ferrari....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuhbbAqkkmI
these efficiencies are in the high 90s (except that battery storage/recovery at these high rates is in the low 90s)321apex wrote: ....... No one however is realizing that the same % game exists in MGU-K and MGU-H efficiency, the electronics that do the AC/DC/AC conversion and the whole deal of battery management. Percentage gains in this area are not mentioned by anyone, while in my view they are the NEW FRONTIER.
What about efficiencies at "challenging" levels of packaging and limited cooling?Tommy Cookers wrote:these efficiencies are in the high 90s (except that battery storage/recovery at these high rates is in the low 90s)321apex wrote: ....... No one however is realizing that the same % game exists in MGU-K and MGU-H efficiency, the electronics that do the AC/DC/AC conversion and the whole deal of battery management. Percentage gains in this area are not mentioned by anyone, while in my view they are the NEW FRONTIER.
so further gains would be insignificant either in F1 or on the road
compared with improving the prime mover efficiency eg from 35 to 37% or 40% or whatever
whether the prime mover is behind an F1 driver or behind the walls of a (Carbon-capturing) power plant
Good point. Improving an electrical efficiency from 92% to 96% will reduce cooling needed by a factor of 2.321apex wrote:What about efficiencies at "challenging" levels of packaging and limited cooling?
What about efficiencies at 200 deg C?
You are speaking of universally known wikipedia level basic theories, while I am asking about "cutting edge" efficiencies and functionalities, currently being developed at the highest tech level required in F1. While we're waiting on China GP to play out, Siemens or ABB may be spending 20 million USD working on 2015 level MGU-K hardware having half the weight and needing half the cooling.
I don't think that capturing another 1% or 3% is going to make much difference. What matters is not how much more you capture but how you use what was captured. When we agree, that out of 2000kW of braking power potential we can easily get our 120kW to use 2MJ for one lap, we no longer care that much whether we harness every last additional Watt thru MGU-H.Tommy Cookers wrote: Formula 1 is not Formula E, F1 is a loosely speaking a 'fuel efficiency' formula
efficiency improves when power is moved (by backpressure) from the crankshaft to the compounding system we call the mgu-h
increasing the total power from the fuel quantity permitted
as the exhaust energy pre-blowdown is equivalent to the whole crankshaft power the turbine and its operation are dominant factors
capturing even 1% more exhaust energy will win races (even if the processing after capture is 'only' 98% efficient or whatever)
ask Mercedes
turbine dominance will increase when/if the permitted fuel quantity is reduced (assuming the mgu-k power limit is unchanged)
also of course the electric system characteristic gives large benefits to car control (again independent of the detail of efficiencies)
but the La Ferrari hybrid system isn't developed to make the most of a rigid defined set of rules. Maybe it is a great system, maybe it is not, until someone build something to exact same specs there really isn't anything to directly compareFoxHound wrote:F1 can live without Ferrari, and Ferrari can do without F1. The whole symbiosis thing is taken way overboard in my view.321apex wrote:Corollary to my Ferrari statement, I will offer you this imponderability.
If what I said is close to being correct, then Ferrari will find it hard to succeed in hybrid F1.
If Ferrari can not win, they may/will cease to participate.
If Ferrari stops racing in F1 what will happen to F1 without them ?
If you are on the same page as I am, then the only way out is for F1 to somewhat "back track" on technology.
As for the tech, they already have some recovery systems on their production cars. Developed by the F1 guys at Gestione Sportiva according to Top Gear for the La Ferrari. Or is it just La Ferrari....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuhbbAqkkmI