Bahrain trace
In other words, you've pretty much just proven my point, and I appreciate that.mrluke wrote:
But they didn't.Moose wrote:Or, just how good the low speed downforce generation was compared to today. That's not surprising - in 2004 they could use the exhausts to generate downforce. Today, they can't.stevesingo wrote:What stands out to me is the difference in low speed corners. Just how much better must the 2004 tyres have been than the tyres used today. Sorry OT
Using top exits does not mean they weren't using them to generate downforce. They used top exits exactly because they had the biggest benefit that they could find at the time, and as you rightly point out, as far back as the early 90s, the teams were using the exhaust to do interesting things. That didn't change when they put them on top, it just changed what they were doing with them.wuzak wrote:But they didn't.Moose wrote:Or, just how good the low speed downforce generation was compared to today. That's not surprising - in 2004 they could use the exhausts to generate downforce. Today, they can't.stevesingo wrote:What stands out to me is the difference in low speed corners. Just how much better must the 2004 tyres have been than the tyres used today. Sorry OT
Or at least most used top exits for their exhausts.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxCaOWC716I&t=1m9s[/youtube]SectorOne wrote:Does anyone have a video of any V10 car from Monza showing the throttle-bar?
Rosberg seems to hit full throttle at about 160 clicks just before he flicks in 4th gear.
Pure drivel. Those v10 cars had waaay more drag than these cars today haha. Remeber top speeds increasing in 2009 with same engines but different bodies to 2008.wuzak wrote:I would discount DRS as a factor since during teh V10 era cars used very low drag setups. Probably equivalent to the current cars with DRS open.Juzh wrote:Such speed, much slipstream, so drs.. wow
In the "drivetrain loss" do you also consider the tire resistance? If not, on benzing's blog (sorry for always call him ) there's this graph showing the resistance, male with data given directly By Pirellibhall II wrote:Work with me here...
Based on maximum tire diameter, maximum track width, and frontal area of the rear wing, I estimate the total frontal area for a 2004 car to be ~1.38m^2.
According to a somewhat dodgy website, horsepower for the Petronas 04A, which was a re-badged Ferrari Type 053 V10, was 880bhp. (Seems low, but whatever.)
During qualifying for the 2004 Chinese Grand Prix, Felipe Massa set the fastest trap speed at 330.3kph in a C23 equipped with the Petronas 04A.
The importance of these figures is this: if we plug them into the drag acceleration calculator, along with straight length and corner exit speed (based on this track guide), we can solve for drag coefficient (Cd).
http://i.imgur.com/m9tn3gT.jpg
This yields a Cd of 0.85 and a maximum speed of 331kph, the latter being indicative of a car set up specifically for that circuit.
The figure also broadly correlates to an estimate of 2012 cars by Road & Track.(Naturally, I think my estimate is closer, but whatever.)Road & Track wrote:Thus, given CDA being about 2015 and A around 2064, I calculate this F1 car's coefficient of drag, its CD, to be about 0.98. With DRS invoked, this diminishes to perhaps 0.81.
Why is this important?
Despite having more total drag (CdA), we can use the Cd of a 2004 car to more or less establish the upper limit for a 2015 car, as long as we account for its reduced frontal area. (That's the "A" in CdA; it's a reference area. For a wing, it's planform. For a car, it's frontal area.)
With DRS engaged, I estimate the frontal area of a 2015 car to be ~ 1.26m^2. If we plug that into the calculator, along with the increased weight of the car, we can use Nico Rosberg's trap speed of 334.6 at the 2015 Chinese Grand Prix to estimate the upper limit of the W06's horsepower.
http://i.imgur.com/6J7jGqX.jpg
That gives us 850bhp.
To cross reference, we can plug those figures into the calculator and compare the result to Rosberg's qualifying trap speed at the 2015 Australian Grand Prix (based on this track guide), because Albert Park has very similar downforce requirements.
http://i.imgur.com/fA1Dt1o.jpg
Close enough for me!
In reality, I suspect current cars have a lower drag coefficient, and thus lower horsepower according to these calculations. But, 850bhp does seem like a reasonable upper limit.
(Note: I gathered figures for a 2004 car back when the conversation involved comparisons between V10s and current PUs. If anyone is inclined to do so, comparing a current car in this manner to a car from 2010-2013 will likely give a more accurate result.)