Exactly: you work out what the best* BSFC you can achieve is (where "best" must account for things like reliability and whether you can sustain that BSFC throughout the rev range), and that is what you declare to the FIA... but you can never improve efficiency (by further leaning out the mix, for example) because that would improve BSFC and the FIA is monitoring your instantaneous BSFC to make sure you don't improve on the declared value.....Lycoming wrote:Of course it's silly to think that you can just get 20% more efficiency without any penalty by changing maps, since if you could do that, you may as well do it from day 1 and not just at le mans.
It is worth remembering that efficiency is inversely proportional to BSFC (a lower BSFC = more efficient); anything anybody can come up with to improve efficiency will improve BSFC, and therefore breach the rules...
More Power for the same fuel = better BSFC = NOT ALLOWED.
The same Power for less fuel = better BSFC = NOT ALLOWED.
A little less power for a lot less fuel = better BSFC = NOT ALLOWED.
Of course, because there is only one Diesel competitor, there is no incentive for Audi to chase BSFC at all since their engine will automatically be balanced against the best petrol engine in the EoT process... whether it is good or bad... and that in turn means they must rely on a better Chassis, better aerodynamics, a bigger Hybrid system, or better drivers, or better reliability to beat the best Petrol... we know the Audi has a smaller Hybrid system than Porsche or Toyota, so to win they must have better Chassis, better aerodynamics, better drivers, or better reliability... or dare I say it... better luck...??!!