It depends on how long you want to bax the engine prior to ignition. You just don't want to ignite unless oil pressure is up to level.godlameroso wrote:The Renault takes less than the Mercedes engine to fire up.
It depends on how long you want to bax the engine prior to ignition. You just don't want to ignite unless oil pressure is up to level.godlameroso wrote:The Renault takes less than the Mercedes engine to fire up.
How can you be sure?FPV GTHO wrote:Renault previously used the MGUK to start the engine on track whilst Mercedes didn't.
At one of the races, I think maybe Spa, Palmer started his car on track after spinning off.Juzh wrote:How can you be sure?FPV GTHO wrote:Renault previously used the MGUK to start the engine on track whilst Mercedes didn't.
Yes, that one is know, but what I was referring to is how can he be sure mercedes PU can not be started by the mgu-k. Has this been confirmed?wuzak wrote:At one of the races, I think maybe Spa, Palmer started his car on track after spinning off.Juzh wrote:How can you be sure?FPV GTHO wrote:Renault previously used the MGUK to start the engine on track whilst Mercedes didn't.
Send drive? I am not getting your point at all here; the MGU-k is always connected so always driven; when recovery is possible, it'll recover (by resisting, thereby harvesting energy.)godlameroso wrote:It can send drive to the MGU-K and the k can resist it to help harvest the full 2MJ which the MGUK seldom recovers, or it can drive the MGU-K with less ES input. I say to be worth it it would have to give you at least ~5 seconds of extra deployment per lap. If you're the only one that has it, it'd be a huge advantage though.
But what would its advantages be over using the current gear-driven transfer?godlameroso wrote:A hydraulic pump is driven off the engine, and sends hydraulic pressure to a hydrostatic motor attached to the MGU-K to further drive the MGU-K in addition to the ES and crankshaft.
Hydrostatic drives are common and the rules permit such a device.
We are missing each other here. Where is this energy coming from? "Recovery" is not the answer to that. What energy is being recovered with your suggestion that cannot or is not recovered at this point?godlameroso wrote:It would lighten the burden on the energy store, allowing for longer deployment per lap. This system would not replace the gear driven MGU-K it would supplement it.
It's simple if your competition can only deploy for 35 seconds and you can deploy for 40 seconds that's an extra 5 seconds that you have 120kw more than the competition.
Not to mention more time spent at full throttle and shorter braking distances would put MGU-K harvesting at a premium. It would certainly be an advantage for the new regulations.
Anyway it's just an idea, the extra weight and space the system would occupy probably makes it impractical.