mrluke wrote:....since when do wastegates make fluttering noises?PlatinumZealot wrote:Whoa.. this waste-gate wide open thing stemmed from Tifosi speculation. It was not confirmed. Yes it seems an advatage for some parts of the track but I was not speaking to that aspect though. I was only confirming that I hear the waste-gate noises in the on-board qualification videos. It is a fluttering noise. This is enough evidence that the waste-gate is frequently used. One only has to observe on his own and not be misguided by the journalists.tuj wrote:
I agree. I thought that we wouldn't see waste-gates in '14 except maybe as a backup to the MGU-K. But PZ is right, in real-world transient conditions, the wg is needed more than perhaps originally thought. Also in qualifying, the Merc's and Ferrari's are leaving the waste-gate wide open to reduce back pressure on the ICE and spinning the compressor with just the MGU-H and battery power.
The exhaust will be louder when they are open as the air will bypass the turbine (heard this a lot on the Ferrari 2014)
Generally wastegate flutter you hear comes more from mechanical wastegates or wastegates that are improperly sized (sometimes resulting in boost creep). Or it comes from blow off valves which many times make a fluttering noise.PlatinumZealot wrote:mrluke wrote:....since when do wastegates make fluttering noises?PlatinumZealot wrote:
Whoa.. this waste-gate wide open thing stemmed from Tifosi speculation. It was not confirmed. Yes it seems an advatage for some parts of the track but I was not speaking to that aspect though. I was only confirming that I hear the waste-gate noises in the on-board qualification videos. It is a fluttering noise. This is enough evidence that the waste-gate is frequently used. One only has to observe on his own and not be misguided by the journalists.
The exhaust will be louder when they are open as the air will bypass the turbine (heard this a lot on the Ferrari 2014)
Yes wastegates can flutter depending on your boost control settings. Rally cars had a very noticeble flutter as well as regular ole street cars at the drag strip. I think in F1 this is the cause of the fluttering noize when the drivers downshift into a corner and the MGUH cannot take any more load.
Just listen for yourself. You will hear it. It is not compressor surge either, because there is the MGUH to regulate the compressor speed. The point I am making is that the waste-gate is regularly used and it is very important to performance how it is positioned.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HwUcVQEP9o0
No, they have testing rigs to see what spec is better, tooojlopez wrote:Honda must be kicking itself after seeing that Mercedes ditched the log exhaust this season.Juzh wrote:Log.McMrocks wrote:Is this log-style or tubular?
Are you sure about the free trubo update for 2016? ThanksSasha wrote:With the new 2016 rules to make the PU's louder,Honda gets to change their turbo without using tokens.So they can use them somewhere eles.
I agree that it is used. I'm not arguing about this, never was. In quali it is used over a longer period of time to allow backpressure reduction, spinning the compressor electrically.PlatinumZealot wrote:[[...]Just listen for yourself. You will hear it. It is not compressor surge either, because there is the MGUH to regulate the compressor speed. The point I am making is that the waste-gate is regularly used and it is very important to performance how it is positioned.[...]
You know what Trini? These new rules about improving the sound by separately routing the wastegates come at the perfect time. Next year you will be able to hear it loud and clear how often the waste-gates are used.trinidefender wrote:Generally wastegate flutter you hear comes more from mechanical wastegates or wastegates that are improperly sized (sometimes resulting in boost creep). Or it comes from blow off valves which many times make a fluttering noise.PlatinumZealot wrote:mrluke wrote:
....since when do wastegates make fluttering noises?
The exhaust will be louder when they are open as the air will bypass the turbine (heard this a lot on the Ferrari 2014)
Yes wastegates can flutter depending on your boost control settings. Rally cars had a very noticeble flutter as well as regular ole street cars at the drag strip. I think in F1 this is the cause of the fluttering noize when the drivers downshift into a corner and the MGUH cannot take any more load.
Just listen for yourself. You will hear it. It is not compressor surge either, because there is the MGUH to regulate the compressor speed. The point I am making is that the waste-gate is regularly used and it is very important to performance how it is positioned.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HwUcVQEP9o0
I'm not saying wastegates aren't used, however it simply makes sense that any energy that can be recovered via the MGU-H braking the compressor wheel is better than a wastegate opening.
As I said, I'm not denying that they aren't used. I believe that due to current control limitations, boost spikes, constant changes of throttle position and ensuring accurate pressure control the wastegate will be used fairly often. However as part of a teams energy recovery strategy, the more you can use the MGU-H as a brake, they more energy you can recover.PlatinumZealot wrote:You know what Trini? These new rules about improving the sound by separately routing the wastegates come at the perfect time. Next year you will be able to hear it loud and clear how often the waste-gates are used.trinidefender wrote:Generally wastegate flutter you hear comes more from mechanical wastegates or wastegates that are improperly sized (sometimes resulting in boost creep). Or it comes from blow off valves which many times make a fluttering noise.PlatinumZealot wrote:
Yes wastegates can flutter depending on your boost control settings. Rally cars had a very noticeble flutter as well as regular ole street cars at the drag strip. I think in F1 this is the cause of the fluttering noize when the drivers downshift into a corner and the MGUH cannot take any more load.
Just listen for yourself. You will hear it. It is not compressor surge either, because there is the MGUH to regulate the compressor speed. The point I am making is that the waste-gate is regularly used and it is very important to performance how it is positioned.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HwUcVQEP9o0
I'm not saying wastegates aren't used, however it simply makes sense that any energy that can be recovered via the MGU-H braking the compressor wheel is better than a wastegate opening.
If the wastegates weren't used regularly what would be the point of making these new rules?
Some serious misconceptions.NL_Fer wrote:Trini you are totally forgetting the fact, that these cars are running in circles and long term is only one lap.
Image Mercedes, their MGU-H is so efficient. They can run all the WOT parts of a lap, with MGU-K enabled. During a qualify lap, the ES doesn't need to be charged after the laps finished. To use more energy from the store, they cannot use MGU-K for than all WOT parts.
The only other solution is to disable the turbine and run the compressor from the ES using MGU-H
Sorry meant MGU-K. Edited previous post to correct mistakehurril wrote:When you say: Have the MGU-H running at 100kW - what exactly do you mean? It's a generator, it'll generate at whichever power level that does not brake the turbo too much. Unless you're talking about the spooling-up function, in which case that's something that only happens at the very start of a straight.