Yes. The tolerances are much tighter. Ask Riff-Raff.Mudflap wrote: ↑11 Aug 2017, 20:11My thoughts exactly.
Ideally you would want to balance turbo/mguh at operating speed, I doubt they can achieve that even with the mystery jet engine tech, however the higher they can go the better. They might have implemented better practices too, gas turbine guys are known to go to extremes when it comes to individually balancing parts, indexing and re-balancing the assemblies, etc.
The statement about 'vibration free' jet engine is either poor translation or complete B/S. I suspect same goes for tolerances being tighter than on F1 engines.
I would be really surprised if for example the straightness tolerance of a 1+ meter long turbo fan shaft would be smaller than that of a high performance turbo shaft. Or if the surface profile tolerance on a 1 meter diameter gas turbine compressor blade was tighter than the one on a 100 mm diameter turbo compressor wheel.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Aug 2017, 23:15Yes. The tolerances are much tighter. Ask Riff-Raff.Mudflap wrote: ↑11 Aug 2017, 20:11My thoughts exactly.
Ideally you would want to balance turbo/mguh at operating speed, I doubt they can achieve that even with the mystery jet engine tech, however the higher they can go the better. They might have implemented better practices too, gas turbine guys are known to go to extremes when it comes to individually balancing parts, indexing and re-balancing the assemblies, etc.
The statement about 'vibration free' jet engine is either poor translation or complete B/S. I suspect same goes for tolerances being tighter than on F1 engines.
The Honda Jet has a multi-stage axial turbine, multi-stage axial LP compressor plus a HP centrifugal compressor.amho wrote: ↑11 Aug 2017, 22:47Honda jet engine is a turbofan engine so it has a compressor and turbine so I guess engineers of Jet department might be helpful in design of TC for ICE and I also think about old rumors of Honda axial flow compressor.
Considering thermal stress/strain in turbo fan jet engine is very important so I guess that Jet engineers are going to help in this area too as I remember Mr.wazari mentioned about unseen stresses in design of TC-mgh-h.
this is going to be sort of an off topic rant, mods feel free to remove it if you feel it is out of placePlatinumZealot wrote: ↑12 Aug 2017, 02:03The F1 parts have a smaller budget and shorter time limits. Formula 1 is entertainment. You only need to be beating your competition and no more. It warrant thats your tolerances (and hence machine time!) need not be as extrememe as that of a jet engine... There was nothing to be gained from being more than 2 seconds faster than your rivals... Nothing to be gained from having an engine last 10,000km... When the rules only need to to last 3000km. So this goes for the conventional engine as honda knew it. Conventional F1 tolerances for the conventional engine parts. Only thing is the long shaft turbo charger is nothing convential at all and the old tolerances that thy have been using just werent cutting it. They need better design tools and better machining tools AND knowledge base to make parts to those tighter tolerances and closer clearances.
It could be possible that Mercedes are using jet engine level tolerances as well... We just don't know.
It hopes to be in a position to introduce 'spec 4' in one of the early races after the summer break, but will not do so until it is confident in the update.
Keep in mind that many of the suppliers that do F1 parts also manufacture aerospace components - on the very same machine tools.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑12 Aug 2017, 02:03The F1 parts have a smaller budget and shorter time limits. Formula 1 is entertainment. You only need to be beating your competition and no more. It warrant thats your tolerances (and hence machine time!) need not be as extrememe as that of a jet engine... There was nothing to be gained from being more than 2 seconds faster than your rivals... Nothing to be gained from having an engine last 10,000km... When the rules only need to to last 3000km. So this goes for the conventional engine as honda knew it. Conventional F1 tolerances for the conventional engine parts. Only thing is the long shaft turbo charger is nothing convential at all and the old tolerances that thy have been using just werent cutting it. They need better design tools and better machining tools AND knowledge base to make parts to those tighter tolerances and closer clearances.
It could be possible that Mercedes are using jet engine level tolerances as well... We just don't know.
Is spec 4 the final spec 3 or is the real deal?etusch wrote: ↑12 Aug 2017, 10:25It hopes to be in a position to introduce 'spec 4' in one of the early races after the summer break, but will not do so until it is confident in the update.
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.ph ... -introduce
The undamped natural frequencies of the forward and reverse whirling modes are indeed independent of balance, however the forced response is VERY dependent as the first order excitation of the unbalance usually has the highest amplitude.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑12 Aug 2017, 13:14
translational/bending vibration and torsional vibration are not the same, and instability is different again
the whirling instability of high rpm shafts is essentially independent of balance and so-called 'g' loads
active anti-whirling exists at testbench level but surely would not be certifiable in aviation
Next year they'll need to last 3,500km, so it's starting to get to that level.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑12 Aug 2017, 02:03The F1 parts have a smaller budget and shorter time limits. Formula 1 is entertainment. You only need to be beating your competition and no more. It warrant thats your tolerances (and hence machine time!) need not be as extrememe as that of a jet engine... There was nothing to be gained from being more than 2 seconds faster than your rivals... Nothing to be gained from having an engine last 10,000km... When the rules only need to to last 3000km. So this goes for the conventional engine as honda knew it. Conventional F1 tolerances for the conventional engine parts. Only thing is the long shaft turbo charger is nothing convential at all and the old tolerances that thy have been using just werent cutting it. They need better design tools and better machining tools AND knowledge base to make parts to those tighter tolerances and closer clearances.
It could be possible that Mercedes are using jet engine level tolerances as well... We just don't know.
Glad to hear. We really need to hit the ground running in testing already for 2018.Honda plans to continue with the same concept next year and has several research programmes focused on 2018 running alongside its normal development for this year.