Parasitic losses from friction are always going to be higher the faster the ICE spins, although I suppose those losses might be smaller in F1 than I expect because of the types of finish used, which reduce friction to a degree unseen in "normal" engines. If the new little Honda ICE has very little internal friction in use, then perhaps that friction concern becomes a lower order than something else.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑05 May 2017, 10:56it's interesting to me that Wazari asks here the question that I asked 5 years ago - why not design around systematically higher rpm ?
eg I suggested that 13000-14800 rpm had some advantages over 10500-12100
mainly 'boost' pressure would be lower ie the supercharging power reduced in greater proportion (eg 23000 would be NA)
the recoverable energy is at least the same at this lower boost
and much less ES energy is used in 'spooling up'
ok at that time I was assuming a mildly lean AFR not very lean
clearly if the very lean TJI or similar suffers at these higher rpm then higher rpm is not on
I'm trying to work out a reason why you would want more PU cycles for the same distance travelled.
Is it easier to run the engine on the absolute limit of knock if you have a larger number of smaller ignition events? Probably.