Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑09 Aug 2017, 09:48
GhostF1 wrote:It's a variant of HCCI that is only utilised at certain running conditions (eg. high load, high rpm), the rest of the time it is an as normal spark ignition engine due to difficulties in maintaing that state at all times. ... Mazda have been doing good work lately.
is that first sentence correct ?
ie wouldn't the CI be taking place at conditions other than high load/high rpm ?
regarding the question of the aero turbine side having something for F1 .....
50+ years of car turbocharging development isn't ideal to help us maximise turbine power as now
turbochargers only need enough turbine power to turn the compressor, maximising their turbine power as such is not a goal
F1 wouldn't have power recovery from the H without importantly higher turbine and compressor efficiencies than turbos
higher efficiencies at high PRs anyway ie high efficiencies at higher PRs
I wonder if Honda's sequence of versions is allowing us to see the pursuit of those high efficiencies?
I imagine the process goes something like this.
You start with combustion process 1 (CP1) which is matched to Turbine 1 (T1) and Compressor 1 (C1)
You change to CP2 which increases ICE power, but it needs air flows that are in areas of C1's capability that are below its best efficiency. Likewise the turbine isn't matched to the new exhaust output. They can all work together by using the MGU-H which recovers less, or even drives when necessary. So ICE performance is up MGU-H is down, but overall PU performance is about the same or better so you introduce it.
Now you design C2 with delivery that matches CP2's needs more efficiently. Release that and the overall PU power goes up via the MGU-H.
Finally you make a new T2 which uses the exhaust from CP2 more efficiently to drive C2. And up goes the PU output again. So one more release.
By PU output I don't mean peak power. I mean the ability to deploy power to reduce lap time.
Once you're happy you start on CP3. Probably in parallel.
the need to redesign the compressor will depend on how different the air requirements of the Combustion Processes are. Maybe it's not necessary, or perhaps lower priority.
I imagine pursuing absolute efficiency in three interlinked components is not easy.
Maybe we shouldn't call them turbochargers?
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