ringo wrote:The braking energy is to be included in the calculation. The car didn't get up to speed by some magical power.
The very same engine that was burning fuel accelerated the car to 200mph before the brakes were applied.
The efficiency of the POWER UNIT, the break thermal efficiency, is the power delivered to the output shaft from the unit as a whole compared to the energy content of the fuel being input. That's a fair and simple judgement.
If the cars are 33% more fuel efficient, then the power units are 1.33 x 32% (old V8) = 42.56% brake thermal efficient.
simple, and that includes all the electrical thingamajigs.
That would be one method of working out the fuel efficiency of the car as a whole. The problem is it doesn't take into account weather changes, aerodynamics of the car (which is less drag this year than last), the road surface that they are driving on (rolling resistance as a result of the friction of the surface) and a big factor, tyre wear etc etc etc. There are simply to many changing variables in that equation.
When engineers quote the efficiency of engines whether it be gas turbines to power aircraft, automobile engines, ship engines, power stations or anything else they generally give you a peak efficiency running at max load at optimal rpm at, and this is very important, ISA conditions.
ISA conditions are international standard atmosphere conditions of 15 degrees Celsius and 1013.25 hPa (hectopascal) at sea level. Below about 10,000ft pressure altitude the standard lapse rate for temperature is 1.98 degrees Celsius per 1000 ft you increase in altitude.
Then they will give you graphs showing the energy efficiency at different loads and different rpm's and with different temperature/pressure combinations.
In almost every case the efficiency percentage given to the media (I.e. not proprietary information to companies using their engines) is indicative of best case efficiency of the engine at ISA conditions when the engine is almost brand new.
This is what leads me do believe the "more than 40%" efficiency is the amount of energy that the ICU + ERS-H (as it can be used to generate some power above a certain exhaust gas flow continuously) running at peak load at max efficiency rpm at ISA conditions.