Nope he was fired, the news is out today in Italy and Leo Turrini confirmed it.
"Personal reasons" is the official reason, that as we know is BS.
Nope he was fired, the news is out today in Italy and Leo Turrini confirmed it.
Thanks for the exact info. I allready thought it was around that number
Haha I couldn't help myself.ziggy wrote: ↑04 Aug 2017, 21:19Thanks for the exact info. I allready thought it was around that number
No, I don' t think so.
I'd say 90kW is probably the extreme upper bound that's practically achievable. The manufacturers probably get somewhere between 40-70kW. Whether it bypasses the ES, or not is another question.
I'm jealous now, that's precisely what I'm good at. We aren't liked very much though, we're too direct for our own good, and have no problem stepping on people's egos to point out their flaws. Comes from a lifetime of being too hard on oneself. But yes I agree, burning fuel is the main source of energy, it powers the ERS and the wheels. The ERS also feeds back into the combustion through the turbo, since the turbo has both a compressor relief valve, wastegates and an MGU-H, boost pressure, and back pressure can all be controlled precisely for the conditions. Even the MGU-K can feed into this process, at the very least it can modify the crank pumping losses or act as combustion damper(controlling crank inertia) to help control vibrations. I wouldn't be surprised if the Spa MGU-K update has something to do with that.Sasha wrote: ↑05 Aug 2017, 02:13It is all about Combustion!
Get that right then everything else falls in line.Bad combustion=low top HP and low ERS.
That is this formula......making max ERS(MGU-H) while not hurting ICE power.Must do it with lean fuel mixture because of fuel flow and fuel amount rules.Honda got it wrong in 2015 because they designed the PU like it was a high rev NA Engine.Can't blame because that is their history......they stayed away from Di/Diesels/Turbos in their production cars until lately....so they are rookies to this tech.
Need the best Software guys too and the best field test engineers(guys who find the problem fast and fix it fast,also can explain the problem in simple term so the whole team understands)
The cvcc system of the first gen civic was almost identical with tji systems of these engines. With some differences in operating conditions of course
Almost certainly not.harjan wrote: ↑05 Aug 2017, 12:37Does anybody know, in qualifying on the hot lap; do the teams use MGU-H harvesting or do they turn it down/off to run maximum ICE performance?
I reckon if you load up the ES on the out lap, you would have enough energy on your hot lap to spool up the turbo and power the MGU-K?
Because if that's the case Honda's lack of peak power in qualifying has little to do with MGU-H harvesting/effect on turbo performance.
I'm not sure that's the case. I think it takes around 80 kw to drive the compressor and I think, although I can't remember why, that blowdown is only about 40 kw. Hence my suggestion of 40 kw drain on the ES. Maybe blowdown is more than 40 kw. Maybe a key difference between the power units is the ratio of blowdown to heat recovery. I don't know and I don't know how an external observer would find out.godlameroso wrote: ↑05 Aug 2017, 16:08Don't forget that the MGU-H is still capable of harvesting even with the wastegates open, with "blowdown" exhaust, like in the Wright TC plane did all those years ago. I remember the Renault engine does it, or did at the beginning of the season.