"MGUH -> MGUK -> Wheels" was obvious to me the day the new formula was rumoured. If it was obvious to me, it would have been obvious to at least some of the engineers in a multi-million dollar design team.Facts Only wrote:Its easy to say something is obvious, especially when you have 2 years of knowledge on what was the best solution.
No. Surge is the low-flow-limit of the compressor. It occurs when the discharge flow is restricted (low engine revs or downstream throttles closed) and boost (compressor speed) is elevated.PlatinumZealot wrote:OK. This is called compressor surge. Stall is the opposite. Surge is when the compressor hit its peak mass flow and it cannot push out any more flow. This is at the far right of the graph and the pressure is very low. The momentum forces of the gas take over. I am not sure if this happens much if at all in F1... because at full throttle your map is still set to deliver power so there would be still a moderate level of boost. I think what you are hearing is just compressor noises as the compressor speed swings up and down.
What probably wasn't obvious to the design team is the extent to which you can recover directly from the MGU-H. No one besides the actual engine manufacturers know how much energy they're deploying to the MGU-K in total from ERS and MGU-H. When I asked for a ballpark estimate from the all knowing people on this forum, I got nothing, and still no one wants to hazard a guess for whatever reason. It's clear however that they're deploying more than 4MJ per lap. The battery itself can store more than 4MJ, you're simply not allowed to deploy more than 4 per lap from there to the MGU-K.gruntguru wrote:"MGUH -> MGUK -> Wheels" was obvious to me the day the new formula was rumoured. If it was obvious to me, it would have been obvious to at least some of the engineers in a multi-million dollar design team.Facts Only wrote:Its easy to say something is obvious, especially when you have 2 years of knowledge on what was the best solution.
Maybe you should have done a search eg on 1/1/2015 I said:godlameroso wrote:When I asked for a ballpark estimate from the all knowing people on this forum, I got nothing, and still no one wants to hazard a guess for whatever reason.
As to compressor and turbine work, I have done some rough calculations for two scenarios.
1. MAP = 3.5, EBP = 3.0Power(compressor) = 80 kW. Pt = 125 kW. Psurplus = 45 kW
2. MAP = 4.5, EBP = 4.0 Pc = 130 kW. Pt = 177 kW. Ps = 47 kW
The upshot is clearly line ball. Not much change in pumping losses, BMEP of the recip' machine nor surplus power from the turbo machinery. OTOH reducing the DP (by increasing EBP) to the following scenario might be useful.
3. MAP = 3.5, EBP = 3.5 Pc = 80 kW. Pt = 140 kW. Psurplus = 60 kW That's a 15 kW improvement. The PMEP will increase by 0.5 Bar so BMEP reduces to 37.5 and crankshaft work suffers by about 7.5 kW
All the above calculations are based on steady state flow, any harvesting of blowdown energy will obviously improve the numbers.
I would guess that Merc can do 6-8mj of electrical energy per lap.godlameroso wrote:What probably wasn't obvious to the design team is the extent to which you can recover directly from the MGU-H. No one besides the actual engine manufacturers know how much energy they're deploying to the MGU-K in total from ERS and MGU-H. When I asked for a ballpark estimate from the all knowing people on this forum, I got nothing, and still no one wants to hazard a guess for whatever reason. It's clear however that they're deploying more than 4MJ per lap. The battery itself can store more than 4MJ, you're simply not allowed to deploy more than 4 per lap from there to the MGU-K.gruntguru wrote:"MGUH -> MGUK -> Wheels" was obvious to me the day the new formula was rumoured. If it was obvious to me, it would have been obvious to at least some of the engineers in a multi-million dollar design team.Facts Only wrote:Its easy to say something is obvious, especially when you have 2 years of knowledge on what was the best solution.
Also, when time is not on your side, plus you have an engineering challenge in the form of incredibly tight packaging on technologies you're essentially developing from the ground up, you'll miss a thing or two. Whether it be conceptual or with practical application. It's just human nature, there's always more wrong answers than less wrong ones, and it takes being completely wrong in order to become less wrong.
Get your application in:gruntguru wrote:"MGUH -> MGUK -> Wheels" was obvious to me the day the new formula was rumoured. If it was obvious to me, it would have been obvious to at least some of the engineers in a multi-million dollar design team.Facts Only wrote:Its easy to say something is obvious, especially when you have 2 years of knowledge on what was the best solution.
Merc will probably send some people to viry ( like they did last year with ferrari ) to sort things up...Facts Only wrote:Get your application in:gruntguru wrote:"MGUH -> MGUK -> Wheels" was obvious to me the day the new formula was rumoured. If it was obvious to me, it would have been obvious to at least some of the engineers in a multi-million dollar design team.Facts Only wrote:Its easy to say something is obvious, especially when you have 2 years of knowledge on what was the best solution.
http://www.renaultsportf1.com/Power-Uni ... ml?lang=fr
They need people of your calibre who know everything.
Omnicorse in their race previews use simulation to give an indication of MGU-K and MGU-H generation.godlameroso wrote: When I asked for a ballpark estimate from the all knowing people on this forum, I got nothing, and still no one wants to hazard a guess for whatever reason. It's clear however that they're deploying more than 4MJ per lap. The battery itself can store more than 4MJ, you're simply not allowed to deploy more than 4 per lap from there to the MGU-K.
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
I think that's very hugely simplified. Of course they will have considered the possibility, but you are forgetting that we are talking about rule sets back in 2011 that was changing by the day and which was not visible for the public. These guys do not deal with rumors.gruntguru wrote:"MGUH -> MGUK -> Wheels" was obvious to me the day the new formula was rumoured. If it was obvious to me, it would have been obvious to at least some of the engineers in a multi-million dollar design team.Facts Only wrote:Its easy to say something is obvious, especially when you have 2 years of knowledge on what was the best solution.