gruntguru wrote:wuzak wrote:Grunt, it appears that Honda did have that very issue. As did Ferrari in 2014.
Wuzak could you expand on that? I find it impossible to believe that two engine teams both overlooked the need to run the PU as a pure TC (turbine -> MGUH -> MGUK -> transmission).
It was rumoured that Ferrari could not operate the MGUK directly from teh MGUK in 2014, that the recovered energy from the MGUH had to be routed through the ES.
The symptom of this method is that they would run out of energy at the end of straights, as happened to Ferrari in 2014 and Honda in 2015. It was a case of only being able to use 4MJ per lap, instead of, quite possibly, 6+ MJ that Mercedes and Renault could use.
Ferrari also increased the size of the turbine for the 2015 season and, maybe, also the compressor. Using the bigger turbine and adjusted control electronics to allow the direct linking of MGUH and MGUK has transformed the Ferrari performance. From what I recall, the only track at which they struggled with running out of ES allowance was Spa, but the loss wasn't the 160hp Honda were having, but probably less than half and for much less of the lap than Honda and Ferrari's 2014 PU.
If you had vision of the rain lights of the cars you could probably do an analysis of the ERS usage. The flashing light is said, by some, to mean the ES is being charged, but I believe it is fundamentally to show that the MGUK is no longer adding power to the ICE. In most cases it will be charging.
Most cars seem to have the flashing light in the last section of a straight, which probably means that the MGUH is feeding the ES at that point, rather than the MGUK.