Abarth wrote:wuzak wrote:PR of 3.5 means they are running 3.5bar absolute or 2.5bar boost (gauge pressure).
Isn't PR pressure ratio?
Yes.
PR = (output pressure)/(input pressure)
Input pressure is 1bar absolute (near enough in standard atmospheric conditions), so to get a PR of 3.5 the output pressure must be 3.5bar absolute.
You are confusing it with boost, which is pressure over and above atmospheric pressure (ie gauge pressure). For most venues in F1 that is ~1bar absolute.
Not sure if in F1 boost is strictly gauge pressure or pressure above normal sea level air pressure.
In WW2 aircraft terms bppst was the latter.
For example, most late model Merlins were rated for +18psi boost.
At sea level that meant that the output pressure was 14.7psi + 18psi = 32.7psi. The pressure ratio of the compressor was, therefore 32.7/14.7 = 2.22.
At ~18,000ft the outside air pressure was half of sea level pressure, 7.35psi. Some versions of Merlins would still be capable of +18psi boost at that altitude (mainly those with 2 stage compressors).
The output pressure remains at 14.7psi + 18psi = 32.7psi. But the input pressure is 7.35psi so the pressure ratio of the compressor is 32.7/7.35 = 4.44.