Even when I agree to some extent, I see it differently.Tim.Wright wrote:As an engineer/technical enthusiast I see F1 powertrains as an overcomplicated-suboptimal solution forced upon the teams by skyrocketing minimum weight requirements - developed at a completely unsustainable cost for purely commercial reasons which all in all has had a negligible effect on the actual racing.
That's not engineering - it's politics and marketing.
Something I like about this AM-RB tie up is they aren't so attached to this political nonsense. And in effect you can't be if your final target is performance.
If I'm understanding the question correctly then it can be rephrased like this?--> If I (Mr. Technical Director of team X) had the choice to run 220 lbs lighter but without any hybrid then would I take that option? Answer is definitely yes.Tim.Wright wrote:If the minimum weight was still 600kg do you think anyone would be running a hybrid?
I think you are dismissing one big aspect of the hybrid system on todays F1 cars - it helps to manage ICE power output, make it more linear - which in turn helps the cars balance and make it driveable, without it you will have big problems coming out of every single corner, which is apparent even today, if you look at footage of corners where camera is stationary, how Mercs are driving like glued to the track and the rest struggle to get all the available power downbill shoe wrote:If I'm understanding the question correctly then it can be rephrased like this?--> If I (Mr. Technical Director of team X) had the choice to run 220 lbs lighter but without any hybrid then would I take that option? Answer is definitely yes.Tim.Wright wrote:If the minimum weight was still 600kg do you think anyone would be running a hybrid?
Same aero (probably slightly better due to better packaging and smaller radiators), same tires, a ~650 hp V6 turbo engine, and again 220 lbs less weight!!! On a few tracks like Monza the reduced power would make me a backmarker, but on 80% of the tracks I would run away from the heavy cars due to much better ratios of downforce:weight and tire:weight.
My fuel consumption would probably be at least as good as the heavy cars because my light weight reduces power needed to go thru corners. It may not make for good racing, but the most energy-efficient way to go quicker around a racetrack is to go quicker in the corners rather than the straights. Heavy hybrids only improve efficiency on the straights.
So it looks like it will be a Hybrid vehicle then!Automotive Drivetrain integration – including hybridisation
The advantages of hybrid technology for hyper performance cars is so obvious that it would be very low tech if a project wouldn't have a hybrid PU system.domh245 wrote:Someone on Reddit posted a link to a Red Bull careers page related to the AM-RB001.
Interestingly, one of the jobs is
So it looks like it will be a Hybrid vehicle then!Automotive Drivetrain integration – including hybridisation
Didnt they already mention that reverse gear probably will be electric?domh245 wrote:Someone on Reddit posted a link to a Red Bull careers page related to the AM-RB001.
Interestingly, one of the jobs is
So it looks like it will be a Hybrid vehicle then!Automotive Drivetrain integration – including hybridisation
I figure we can take a 2012-era 2.4L V-8 with rev-limit and minimum-weight as a useful metric for IC engine performance. This is 750 hp and 100 kg, so 7.5 hp/kg.Jolle wrote:The advantages of hybrid technology for hyper performance cars is so obvious that it would be very low tech if a project wouldn't have a hybrid PU system.
Aha! You added the battery into the equation. It's would be the same to add a full tank of petrol.bill shoe wrote:I figure we can take a 2012-era 2.4L V-8 with rev-limit and minimum-weight as a useful metric for IC engine performance. This is 750 hp and 100 kg, so 7.5 hp/kg.Jolle wrote:The advantages of hybrid technology for hyper performance cars is so obvious that it would be very low tech if a project wouldn't have a hybrid PU system.
Current F1 hybrid stuff is ~ 45 kg for the whole MGU-K/control electronics/battery package, yes? It puts out 200 hp? So then 4.4 hp/kg.
It appears that any hybrid car will need both a multi-gear transmission and a fuel (petrol) tank in order to use any combo of IC and/or electric. For example, all electric power in a hybrid is originally sourced from the petrol unless you’re doing very short trips or add lots of battery weight. In other words it doesn’t make sense to attribute transmission or petrol weights exclusively to one motive type or the other (IC or electric).
If you were Mr. Newey would you achieve your oodles-of-power target by adding more IC at 7.5 hp/kg, or by adding hybridization at 4.4 hp/kg?
So high performance track cars are lighter with IC-only rather than hybrid. Street cars with catalysts and mufflers would be a closer contest. However, the street-legal aspect of Newey’s hyper-car may be fading. They may end up going for more of a “street-type” car that is not actually production-car road-legal in most developed countries.
I can see a mild hybrid unit that replaces the weight of starter, alternator, and reverse gear with a small unit that adds a useful 100 hp for temporary bursts. This type of system justifies its tubby weight by replacing some of the admittedly tubby IC accessories.
P1 -The electrical side of the powertrain consists of an ultra-compact Samsung lithium-ion battery pack, situated in the floor and supplying current to a motor mounted behind the transmission and driving the differential directly. A secondary generator, effectively a big alternator, recharges the battery from the engine. The electrical system adds 140kg in weight, the battery being 66kg, yet Ferrari says the car will weigh ‘about 1300kg’ (the Enzo was 1365kg). Total combined power is 950bhp.
So, the current "best of breed" adds 140-170kg to the weight of the base petrol-engine-only supercar.Unlike Ferrari, McLaren has effectively combined the electric motor with the engine – it sits inside the engine block casing. This means it works via the seven-speed twin-clutch transmission and, unlike the Ferrari, its torque contribution is effectively multiplied by the gearbox. The battery pack is heavier than the Ferrari’s at 96kg and bulkier too – stacked vertically at the back of the passenger compartment. The full electrical system adds a claimed 170kg to the P1’s weight, bringing it up to 1395kg ‘dry’, while the total combined power is 903bhp.
bill shoe wrote:I figure we can take a 2012-era 2.4L V-8 with rev-limit and minimum-weight as a useful metric for IC engine performance. This is 750 hp and 100 kg, so 7.5 hp/kg.
Current F1 hybrid stuff is ~ 45 kg for the whole MGU-K/control electronics/battery package, yes? It puts out 200 hp? So then 4.4 hp/kg.
It appears that any hybrid car will need both a multi-gear transmission and a fuel (petrol) tank in order to use any combo of IC and/or electric. For example, all electric power in a hybrid is originally sourced from the petrol unless you’re doing very short trips or add lots of battery weight. In other words it doesn’t make sense to attribute transmission or petrol weights exclusively to one motive type or the other (IC or electric).
If you were Mr. Newey would you achieve your oodles-of-power target by adding more IC at 7.5 hp/kg, or by adding hybridization at 4.4 hp/kg?
So high performance track cars are lighter with IC-only rather than hybrid. Street cars with catalysts and mufflers would be a closer contest. However, the street-legal aspect of Newey’s hyper-car may be fading. They may end up going for more of a “street-type” car that is not actually production-car road-legal in most developed countries.
I can see a mild hybrid unit that replaces the weight of starter, alternator, and reverse gear with a small unit that adds a useful 100 hp for temporary bursts. This type of system justifies its tubby weight by replacing some of the admittedly tubby IC accessories.
You will want these addresses-Jolle wrote:Around 20kg together, 200Hp? 10 HP/kg, including storage.
Sir:
I am interested in working with your company. I've recently determined that electric hybrid systems of around 10 HP/kg are quite feasible with current technology, but you continue to persist with supercar hybrid systems that are 5 times as heavy, and with F1 systems that are still 2 times as heavy. I know something that everyone else in your company does not. Specifically...
Seems like a pretty good approach. Only drawback is that batteries may have overtaken SuperCapacitors for energy density and even power density. Could ideally use the MGU mass as part of the flywheel mass?djos wrote:What are the chances of something a bit more clever ... say ditching the Starter Motor & Heavy SLA battery and having a small MGU integrated into the gear-box with a Mazda SkyActive style Capacitor for storage? It could then start the engine and provide reverse (GB clutch disconnects the ICE while reversing) and you could even use the Capacitor to run electrics etc when stationary (the MGU doesn't provide any Forward drive so small energy reserve isnt wasted).
Thoughts?