I'm guessing, but I suppose it's because McLaren are seen by some as the English Ferrari (given the roadcar company, etc). It's fairly far from the truth in my opinion, but I sort of see the logic.
I'm guessing, but I suppose it's because McLaren are seen by some as the English Ferrari (given the roadcar company, etc). It's fairly far from the truth in my opinion, but I sort of see the logic.
Might be cheaper if they just started selling caffeinated beverages on the side. Which begs the question, what is more profitable: selling overpriced engines a la Ferrari, or selling overpriced fizzy drinks a la Red Bull?
IMO it is impossible. The engines now cover such an array of sciences and technologies, that to have the best staff in field for those technologies themselves already presents significant costs. The budget for the staff alone per year would be many many millions. Then there is the materials costs, the facilities (State of the art Dynos, supercomputers etc), the R&D, the premiums for attaining goals, production or purchasing at such a high speed. Now take those costs for the current engine, and add the costs for the next engine, started 3 years in advance. You cannot spare a penny in this field, or you risk falling behind.roon wrote: ↑12 Apr 2017, 21:44Stupid question time: why is this the case? What drives the cost here? I will go ahead and speculate that it might have something to do with the iterative nature of R&D which can be massively upscaled in this context. Then you get to exotic material and cutting-edge design costs & low quantity boutique manufacturing & associated high-cost expertise.
What is to stop some mad geniuses from forming a smaller company to produce one of these PUs at a reduced cost?
Can the few, no matter how bright, ever compete against enterprise? Is scale in this context insurmountable; intractable?
Uhm. In bold, that copy and paste you made, just proven that your water wheel is not a turbocharger. See why you were talking nonsense before?Chene_Mostert wrote: ↑12 Apr 2017, 21:31
"The turbocharger consists of a single stage impulse turbine connected to a centrifugal impeller via a shaft.
The turbine is driven by the engine exhaust gas, which enters via the gas inlet casing. The gas expands through a nozzle ring where the pressure energy of the gas is converted to kinetic energy. This high velocity gas is directed onto the turbine blades where it drives the turbine wheel, and thus the compressor at high speeds (10 -15000 rpm). The exhaust gas then passes through the outlet casing to the exhaust uptakes.
Good guess/insight that's exactly how a blowdown turbine works. And the compounding to the crank used hydraulics. I imagine it would be too heavy and bulky for F1 uses even though the regulations allow it.roon wrote: ↑12 Apr 2017, 21:35No pressure drop, no temperature drop, so... only a change in velocity?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑12 Apr 2017, 20:33regarding the supposed unimpeachable applicability here of the so-called laws of thermodynamics, consider that .....
16000 'Turbocompound' aircraft engines gained at takeoff from recovery turbines 18 hp mechanically added to every 100 hp 'piston' crankshaft power
without any drop in the mean exhaust pressure across the turbines and apparently without any temperature drop across the turbines
(the exhaust plume post-turbine was white hot from atmospheric combustion of fuel carried across in the exhaust by the very rich mixture used)
and free of cost in terms of extra fuel consumption
all this free recovered power came from the exhaust 'pulses' of high velocity/high pressure in the exhaust stream
this was a few years after the UK Govt bought a race-winning Norton motorcycle to investigate its volumetric efficiency that 'science' said was impossible
Although you did mention *mean* exhaust pressure, so could it be that the peak and trough of the pressure fluctuations are changing pre- & post-turbine without affecting the average (much)? Such that pre-turbine the manifold sees both lower and higher pressure than what is measure post-turbine.
Apologies to the PhDs for the physics 101 discourse...
About 250*C on these engines. (Assumes 800*C and 3.5 bar abs turbine inlet and 80% efficiency.)
The turbine of your average turbocharger is capable of extracting a considerable portion of the blowdown kinetic energy and certainly does in an F1 engine. This is in addition to the large amount of heat energy (enthalpy) extracted. The 250*C temperature drop mentioned in the previous post equates to about 150 kW of power.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 01:40Good guess/insight that's exactly how a blowdown turbine works. And the compounding to the crank used hydraulics. I imagine it would be too heavy and bulky for F1 uses even though the regulations allow it.roon wrote: ↑12 Apr 2017, 21:35No pressure drop, no temperature drop, so... only a change in velocity?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑12 Apr 2017, 20:33regarding the supposed unimpeachable applicability here of the so-called laws of thermodynamics, consider that .....
16000 'Turbocompound' aircraft engines gained at takeoff from recovery turbines 18 hp mechanically added to every 100 hp 'piston' crankshaft power
without any drop in the mean exhaust pressure across the turbines and apparently without any temperature drop across the turbines
(the exhaust plume post-turbine was white hot from atmospheric combustion of fuel carried across in the exhaust by the very rich mixture used)
and free of cost in terms of extra fuel consumption
all this free recovered power came from the exhaust 'pulses' of high velocity/high pressure in the exhaust stream
this was a few years after the UK Govt bought a race-winning Norton motorcycle to investigate its volumetric efficiency that 'science' said was impossible
Although you did mention *mean* exhaust pressure, so could it be that the peak and trough of the pressure fluctuations are changing pre- & post-turbine without affecting the average (much)? Such that pre-turbine the manifold sees both lower and higher pressure than what is measure post-turbine.
Apologies to the PhDs for the physics 101 discourse...
Wow! I expected these engines to have higher difference, that's a very high numbergruntguru wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 01:49About 250*C on these engines. (Assumes 800*C and 3.5 bar abs turbine inlet and 80% efficiency.)
The current regulations do not allow a direct connection between turbocharger and crank. Only the electrical path defined by the MGUH and MGUK.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 01:40Good guess/insight that's exactly how a blowdown turbine works. And the compounding to the crank used hydraulics. I imagine it would be too heavy and bulky for F1 uses even though the regulations allow it.
800° EGT? 80% is for combustion efficiency (conversion of chemical energy to heat energy)?gruntguru wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 01:49About 250*C on these engines. (Assumes 800*C and 3.5 bar abs turbine inlet and 80% efficiency.)
80% is turbine efficiency, in other words conversion of exhaust heat into work, either for the MGU-H or compressor, or both.roon wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 03:54800° EGT? 80% is for combustion efficiency (conversion of chemical energy to heat energy)?
How does this relate to claimed thermal efficiencies of ~50% for these PUs? I'd like to make a visualization of this at some point. Starting from fuel and following the energy conversion paths from there. Fuel>combustion>output shaft power & turbine shaft power, alongside friction & thermal losses.
Here's a rough, rough draft using figures and proportions off the top of my head, written in the finest amateur parlance. So probably not very accurate, but the proportions might at least be in the ballpark.
https://s11.postimg.org/ncdyt9fpf/image.jpg
Ah, well, that mucks up the first draft then. I suppose combustion efficiency would be somewhere closer to 100% wouldn't it?godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 03:5980% is turbine efficiency, in other words conversion of exhaust heat into work, either for the MGU-H or compressor, or both.roon wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 03:54800° EGT? 80% is for combustion efficiency (conversion of chemical energy to heat energy)?
How does this relate to claimed thermal efficiencies of ~50% for these PUs? I'd like to make a visualization of this at some point. Starting from fuel and following the energy conversion paths from there. Fuel>combustion>output shaft power & turbine shaft power, alongside friction & thermal losses.
Here's a rough, rough draft using figures and proportions off the top of my head, written in the finest amateur parlance. So probably not very accurate, but the proportions might at least be in the ballpark.
https://s11.postimg.org/ncdyt9fpf/image.jpg
80% of what's left over after working the crankroon wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 04:05Ah, well, that mucks up the first draft then. I suppose combustion efficiency would be somewhere closer to 100% wouldn't it?godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 03:5980% is turbine efficiency, in other words conversion of exhaust heat into work, either for the MGU-H or compressor, or both.roon wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 03:54
800° EGT? 80% is for combustion efficiency (conversion of chemical energy to heat energy)?
How does this relate to claimed thermal efficiencies of ~50% for these PUs? I'd like to make a visualization of this at some point. Starting from fuel and following the energy conversion paths from there. Fuel>combustion>output shaft power & turbine shaft power, alongside friction & thermal losses.
Here's a rough, rough draft using figures and proportions off the top of my head, written in the finest amateur parlance. So probably not very accurate, but the proportions might at least be in the ballpark.
https://s11.postimg.org/ncdyt9fpf/image.jpg
?godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 04:0880% of what's left over after working the crankroon wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 04:05Ah, well, that mucks up the first draft then. I suppose combustion efficiency would be somewhere closer to 100% wouldn't it?godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 03:59
80% is turbine efficiency, in other words conversion of exhaust heat into work, either for the MGU-H or compressor, or both.