Scarbs on the new Photos of the Mercedes PU.
Not possible. Regulations state that both turbine wheels must rotate at the same speed.ojlopez wrote:I don't know if this has been discussed before, but is it possible that Mercedes has some kind of gearing in the shaft that runs from one side to the other of the turbocharger? So instead of the shaft turning 100,000+ RPM inside the engine, it runs say 10,000 RPM? It would have less vibration and friction. This could outbalance the gearing loses.
Get rid of max fuel flow limit and max fuel carried rule and see all problems vanish. Kind of..thedutchguy wrote: Bernie also added that F1 'needs to get rid of these engine regulations, because they are not Formula 1' adding that he will try to do something about it in the off season.
No, keep the fuel flow regulation, dump the race fuel requirement.Juzh wrote:Get rid of max fuel flow limit and max fuel carried rule and see all problems vanish. Kind of..thedutchguy wrote: Bernie also added that F1 'needs to get rid of these engine regulations, because they are not Formula 1' adding that he will try to do something about it in the off season.
Just bolt the old V8's back in, saves money and works just as well.Blackout wrote:Bring back the 2006-2013 V8, update them with modern technologies, add an electric compressor that uses ERS power exlusively and boosts the V8 at the lower revs only. (why not: remove two cylinders)
That way you keep the high revs, the sound and the costs under control : P
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
What's the point of an electric compressor without an elecric turbine to power it?Blackout wrote:Bring back the 2006-2013 V8, update them with modern technologies, add an electric compressor that uses ERS power exlusively and boosts the V8 at the lower revs only. (why not: remove two cylinders)
That way you keep the high revs, the sound and the costs under control : P
Look no further than the above. Maybe a small v8 with the increased capacity super capacitor Hybrid power. This is the none turbo option that can keep the signature sound. Sounds like a pre 2014 setup doesn't it? lol but it was the right direction. It only need the 2014 integration of the electric boost and the increased capacity.What’s the Toyota TS040 Hybrid’s powertrain spec?
It’s the biggest (and possibly the best-sounding) engine of the three LMP1 big-hitters. While Porsche has opted for turbocharged V4 petrol power, and Audi a V6 turbodiesel, the TS040 uses a wailing 3.7-litre petrol-fuelled V8, developing 513bhp.
Toyota brags that the V8 engine is built at the company’s Higashi-Fuji technical centre, where Toyota’s road-going engine R&D work is carried out. The Japanese maker is making plenty of noise about its petrol-hybrid racing tech having a direct trickle-down effect into your next Toyota or Lexus hybrid.
In addition, Toyota has taken full advantage of the relaxed rules on hybrid boost propulsion. While the petrol engine feeds the rear wheels, the electric motors deliver drive to all four wheels, with a huge 473bhp kick. Together, the TS040’s powerplants add up to make 986bhp – an identical (1000PS) power figure to the original-spec Bugatti Veyron.