This just comes across like wanting to show off. What fact is this? You might as well say it if you're going to mention knowing something about it.Muulka wrote:Like I said, none of that really matters; the compressor speed can be extremely accurately tuned with the MGU-H. If they're having issues such as you suspect they are, the problem is all down to control electronics and software.
Frankly, the things they're saying (coupled with a particular fact I know about a competitor's engine which I don't believe is common knowledge) suggest to me that part of their problem is that their turbine is too big/powerful and they're harvesting too much energy and putting a ton of pack-pressure on the engine. Would explain why they think their deployment is so good; Honda seem to focus far too much on improving one thing which they think is the problem, then realising that that didn't magically fix everything, so they move onto another part of the engine, each time expecting a magic bullet. These engines are all about finding compromises between the different components. Honda seem to not have quite realised that yet
Ha! This has me intrigued.Muulka wrote:If I give any more info I'm liable to lose my job if anyone identifies me. So no, I'm going to pass on that.hurril wrote:This just comes across like wanting to show off. What fact is this? You might as well say it if you're going to mention knowing something about it.Muulka wrote:Like I said, none of that really matters; the compressor speed can be extremely accurately tuned with the MGU-H. If they're having issues such as you suspect they are, the problem is all down to control electronics and software.
Frankly, the things they're saying (coupled with a particular fact I know about a competitor's engine which I don't believe is common knowledge) suggest to me that part of their problem is that their turbine is too big/powerful and they're harvesting too much energy and putting a ton of pack-pressure on the engine. Would explain why they think their deployment is so good; Honda seem to focus far too much on improving one thing which they think is the problem, then realising that that didn't magically fix everything, so they move onto another part of the engine, each time expecting a magic bullet. These engines are all about finding compromises between the different components. Honda seem to not have quite realised that yet
I mentioned my knowledge (and I did do a fairly extensive Google search to see if it was mentioned anywhere- it's definitely relevant) just to reinforce that I'm not just BS-ing. I want to give interested people a little bit more of an insight, but I have to be careful!
I have to question this, simply because if they're experiencing so much backpressure, they can always open the wastegates to acheive what they want. I await your explanation via PM.Muulka wrote:Like I said, none of that really matters; the compressor speed can be extremely accurately tuned with the MGU-H. If they're having issues such as you suspect they are, the problem is all down to control electronics and software.
Frankly, the things they're saying (coupled with a particular fact I know about a competitor's engine which I don't believe is common knowledge) suggest to me that part of their problem is that their turbine is too big/powerful and they're harvesting too much energy and putting a ton of pack-pressure on the engine. Would explain why they think their deployment is so good; Honda seem to focus far too much on improving one thing which they think is the problem, then realising that that didn't magically fix everything, so they move onto another part of the engine, each time expecting a magic bullet. These engines are all about finding compromises between the different components. Honda seem to not have quite realised that yet
I don't think the compressor needs 120 kW, I'm pretty sure I've seen a figure around 80 kW. And I believe the wastegates are arranged so that the kinetic, impulse, energy continues to be recovered supplying some of that 80 kW. So the MGU-H power drain will be considerably less than 120 kW, maybe half, albeit there will be some drain to deal with spooling up.Muulka wrote:Opening the wastegate uses a lot of energy, as you have to supply the full 120 kW to the MGUH. I seriously doubt that any of the teams are running with any significant wastegate opening in the race at least (with the exception of somewhere like Monaco where there's so much braking). Qualifying is another story, however.NL_Fer wrote:What i find strange is this years rave about Honda's deployment. I know it sucked in 2015, but a proper engine is not about how much deployment you have, but how much harvesting you need to do and how many seconds you can run with open wastegate.
But again they were much better in the race than qually, so overall efficiency must me good this year. So it's down to absolute peak power i suspect.
If by turbine you mean compressor I think we agree.NL_Fer wrote:120kw mgu-k + 60-80kw mgu-h to drive the turbine actually. But maybe for a straight like China, i can be usefull to do it for a few seconds at the beginning of the straight.