godlameroso wrote:Again don't assume they're using 100% harvesting energy, as this introduces oversteer on entry. The MGU-K controller may apply full harvesting at the start of the braking phase, and ramp down slowly as the driver approaches the apex to keep the car stable, mid corner the MGU-K rate will vary, maybe use a little fuel to counteract the oversteer tendency, and keep wheel spin in check by applying negative torque to smooth out power delivery.
I'd say on average the MGU-K harvests at 70-80% of its rated capacity overall per lap, and rarely does it contribute the full 2MJ of energy. The MGU-H is more important than people realize but the fact of the matter is these units are shrouded in just as much secrecy as the engine itself, perhaps more.
At a yearly price of ~€8,000,000 euros for 5 MGU-H units, believe me we're lucky we've seen the casing, let alone know about any of it's inner workings. They'll only get better despite the team lies about it only being worth hundredths of a second per lap to develop them.
I agree with you about breaking and about MGU-H.
I also assumed that on most tracks there is not enough breaking to fill battery(2MJ), but I believe that there is performance to be gained by generating at the end of the straights. That might be the reason why Ferrari is losing speed.
Can any energy be harvested from MGU-H during breaking?
I assume teams keep trothlebodies open during breaking and compressor keeps pumping air into the engine. Is this air compressed enough by the engine to keep turbo spinning and eliminate turbo lag? Or maybe compressed so much there is enough energy to harvest?