Discolouration mentioned....heat.
I think I mentioned the seals failing a while back.
Interesting, the Mercedes power unit also had trouble with its seals, which is why you see them belch oil clouds when they idle. The type of seal they ended up using leads to them burning oil.MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑05 Jun 2017, 17:48I think I mentioned the seals failing a while back.
The bearings are not the root of the problem just where the problem ends up.
Sealing a shaft that spins at 125,000 rpm whilst also control air and fluid pressures in specific places is not as easy as some might think.godlameroso wrote: ↑05 Jun 2017, 17:53Interesting, the Mercedes power unit also had trouble with its seals, which is why you see them belch oil clouds when they idle. The type of seal they ended up using leads to them burning oil.MrPotatoHead wrote: ↑05 Jun 2017, 17:48I think I mentioned the seals failing a while back.
The bearings are not the root of the problem just where the problem ends up.
Certainly it must be an indication of some particular design feature, it is very noticeable, even to a non-expert like me !godlameroso wrote: ↑05 Jun 2017, 17:53Interesting, the Mercedes power unit also had trouble with its seals, which is why you see them belch oil clouds when they idle. The type of seal they ended up using leads to them burning oil.
If they are using a clutch to disengage the turbine from the MGU-H like the Mercs do then the shaft isn't the length of the engine. It's probably two smaller drive shafts mounted end to end at the MGU-H.
I was under the impression they don't and have not seen anything indicating that merc are using a clutch in their turbocharger/MGU-H
What makes you think Mercedes are doing this?
Do they measure and log vibrations in that location? It seems that no abnormalities showed up in the data (as said in the interview... So probably means the bad vibrations were accepted for the time but unbeknownst to them those acceptable vibrations were still causing small but accumative damage?