How much extra MGIH power could they get if allowed to burn fuel in the oxygen rich exhaust of the current engines?
It should also help with the noise that many complain about.
This would be similar to a rally car antilag sistem, wouldn't it?wuzak wrote:How much extra MGIH power could they get if allowed to burn fuel in the oxygen rich exhaust of the current engines?
It should also help with the noise that many complain about.
Or just underfuel.ian_s wrote:i wonder what would happen if instead of the 100kg maximum fuel limit, the FIA insisted on a fixed amount of fuel, that theoretically would mean the cars could run at the 100kg/hr fuel flow limit for the entire race.
we'd have no running in 'fuel saving' mode, the drivers can floor it out of every corner, and in fact are encouraged to push as hard as possible early in the race to burn the fuel off!
for this they would need a fuel (flow rate) meter at least 10x as accurate as is possible in this applicationian_s wrote:i wonder what would happen if instead of the 100kg maximum fuel limit, the FIA insisted on a fixed amount of fuel, that theoretically would mean the cars could run at the 100kg/hr fuel flow limit for the entire race.
we'd have no running in 'fuel saving' mode, the drivers can floor it out of every corner, and in fact are encouraged to push as hard as possible early in the race to burn the fuel off!
I believe that at most races less than 100kg is used as it simply is the faster strategy for the race. Less weight at the start means less stress on the tyres for the same laptime/corner speed/acceleration. As the Pirellis are that sensible that's the way to go currently.Tommy Cookers wrote:apparently no-one uses 100 kg of fuel ?
if so, is this because they limit their fuel rate target to eg 98 kg/hr to give a margin against the limitations of meter accuracy ?
Plz stop overyhping the impact of deliberate under fuelling. On most tracks no one was under fuelled.Blanchimont wrote:I believe that at most races less than 100kg is used as it simply is the faster strategy for the race. Less weight at the start means less stress on the tyres for the same laptime/corner speed/acceleration. As the Pirellis are that sensible that's the way to go currently.Tommy Cookers wrote:apparently no-one uses 100 kg of fuel ?
if so, is this because they limit their fuel rate target to eg 98 kg/hr to give a margin against the limitations of meter accuracy ?
If the PU would weigh less(the regulations demand minimum weights for the ICE and batteries) and better tyres were available, we probably would see that the teams would try to reach the 100kg and do not have to lift and coast.
. . and of course the ES gets more charge than it would under normal braking. Thanks Blanchimont.Blanchimont wrote:Lift and coast is the most efficient way to save fuel in terms of time_loss/fuel_saved. As lift and coast reduces the speed from let's say 320 to 260km/h before the brakes are applied, it also helps conserving the tyres as at high speeds the tyre braking force is the highest due to downforce. Very important with Pirelli tyres!
This is part of the problem with F1. No-one explains and very few understand.gruntguru wrote:. . and of course the ES gets more charge than it would under normal braking. Thanks Blanchimont.Blanchimont wrote:Lift and coast is the most efficient way to save fuel in terms of time_loss/fuel_saved. As lift and coast reduces the speed from let's say 320 to 260km/h before the brakes are applied, it also helps conserving the tyres as at high speeds the tyre braking force is the highest due to downforce. Very important with Pirelli tyres!