So the combustion issue was causing excessive knocking/detonation, and the vibration problem was damaging the MGU-H? I understand they've made progress with the second, but what about the first?
Honda never used TJI, that's a Ferrari thing, they did have a lean burn combustion process, and that's as much as we know.
Wasn't the original plan to have a new (functional) combustion concept already this year? First at Spa then probably postponed until October (and hopefully not postponed again to 2018).godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Aug 2017, 20:23So the combustion issue was causing excessive knocking/detonation, and the vibration problem was damaging the MGU-H? I understand they've made progress with the second, but what about the first?
I would like to see what that graph looked like after the British GP.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 02:35http://i.imgur.com/NJjF4ku.jpg
For your entertainment.
Looks like Honda went from ~958hp to ~970
Renault 980 - 994
Mercedes 990 - 1010
Ferrari 983 - 1006
I don't expect this to be very accurate, but if it is the differences don't seem that great, and if Honda's updates materialize they could become competitive as a 30hp improvement would put them at 1,000hp which would be a big achievement for this year, in my opinion.
Very good points regarding materials and construction requirements.Mudflap wrote: ↑13 Aug 2017, 13:17Having one common housing would mean that it has to be horizontally split through the middle of the bearing bores which is a big no no for high speed turbo machinery.
Secondly the turbine housing end has to be inconel - that would dictate that the whole housing is inconel which is denser than steel and almost 3 times denser than aluminium.
The vibration benefits are questionable to say the least.
Basically those charts are saying Honda is a actually worse off now compared to the competition vs at the start of the season? I find that a little hard to believe, especially with all the vibration issues they had at the start of the year causing them to run at basically a detuned state.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 02:35http://i.imgur.com/NJjF4ku.jpg
For your entertainment.
Looks like Honda went from ~958hp to ~970
Renault 980 - 994
Mercedes 990 - 1010
Ferrari 983 - 1006
I don't expect this to be very accurate, but if it is the differences don't seem that great, and if Honda's updates materialize they could become competitive as a 30hp improvement would put them at 1,000hp which would be a big achievement for this year, in my opinion.
Can you explain how this graph could be real at all?!godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 02:35http://i.imgur.com/NJjF4ku.jpg
For your entertainment.
Looks like Honda went from ~958hp to ~970
Renault 980 - 994
Mercedes 990 - 1010
Ferrari 983 - 1006
I don't expect this to be very accurate, but if it is the differences don't seem that great, and if Honda's updates materialize they could become competitive as a 30hp improvement would put them at 1,000hp which would be a big achievement for this year, in my opinion.
godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 02:35http://i.imgur.com/NJjF4ku.jpg
For your entertainment.
Looks like Honda went from ~958hp to ~970
Renault 980 - 994
Mercedes 990 - 1010
Ferrari 983 - 1006
I don't expect this to be very accurate, but if it is the differences don't seem that great, and if Honda's updates materialize they could become competitive as a 30hp improvement would put them at 1,000hp which would be a big achievement for this year, in my opinion.
I believe Ferrari dropped their boost this year in order to get more out of the MGUH.zac510 wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 12:08I don't see how Mercedes can keep pushing up the boost pressure either, when ~12 months or so ago they were already crazily lean on AFR and worried about noxious emissions from the lean burn. When I heard that I presumed gains of the next few years would come in other areas of the engine - friction, temperatures, etc - rather than continually increasing boost pressure.
I don't have to explain anything, 1 not my graph, 2 it says it's an approximation ie made up, 3 I don't think they're accurate myself.restless wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 10:31Can you explain how this graph could be real at all?!godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 02:35http://i.imgur.com/NJjF4ku.jpg
For your entertainment.
Looks like Honda went from ~958hp to ~970
Renault 980 - 994
Mercedes 990 - 1010
Ferrari 983 - 1006
I don't expect this to be very accurate, but if it is the differences don't seem that great, and if Honda's updates materialize they could become competitive as a 30hp improvement would put them at 1,000hp which would be a big achievement for this year, in my opinion.
We know transmission ratio can be changed ONCE per season.
So, how all cars get different speeds with same gear ratio? (ok Ferrari changed it, but we heard nothing from Honda)
From graphs it lokks Honda got 50hp at lower speed (270km/h) and almost nothing as top power
But these revs/shift points look bogus
PS: Ok, different drag , different tracks... but then how can they calculate power, without knowing drag...
And I'd epect Honda to be 50hp closer at peak power too, given how far away they were in Australia