sosic2121 wrote:gruntguru wrote:1. "Cold blowing"? If that means using air pumped through the ICE under braking/decel', all the teams would be using it - IF - there is enough energy in that cold air to enable useful power in the turbine.
2. ". . . if the turbine is more efficient than the ICE". That is never the case.
3. "Genset mode" (the efficient alternative to hot blowing) would be enabled whenever the power required to the wheels is less than the maximum output of the ICE but greater than minus-120 kW. (below minus-120 you are in "regen braking mode". There are many seconds per lap when the power requirement falls in this category, so adding the energy available from regen and genset modes, it will always be possible to exceed the per-lap storage limit. So I repeat, hot blowing is an inefficient, unlikely scenario.
first, all you said is true, but...
1. According to my source (for v8) there is still 75% of the exhaust pressure compering to full throttle.
2. Cold blowing is using waste energy
3. Rules allow for 4MJ to be harvest during a lap, but only 2MJ can come from MGU-K.
So, to harvest other 2MJ MGU-H has to harvest somewhere.
1. No chance of back-pressure being 75% with no combustion. Even if the throttles are kept wide open and the fuel cut. All the turbine energy will be consumed by the compressor and even that won't be enough to maintain boost. (Think turbocharged diesel engine at max rpm downhill then cut the fuel - the turbo spools down immediately).
Even if exhaust pressure stays high, that won't provide the same power to the turbine. Most of the turbine power comes from heat (internal energy) in the exhaust.
2. I was responding to a quote from FW17
" Hot Blowing - It the turbine is more efficient that the IC engine why not use hot blowing?"
3. Thanks for clarifying the rule. "Genset mode" will also create additional MGUH energy in some (higher load) conditions. Some tuning of spark advance can increase this proportion at a small cost to efficiency. This is far better than outright "hot blowing" where fuel is burned to generate exhaust energy alone.