I think they're burning 2 types of fuel, you're allowed 2 types per event, and are allowed to store 2 liters outside the main fuel tank. You have a low reactivity fuel for the main chamber (What you keep in the main fuel bladder). Then you have a higher reactivity fuel for the pre-chamber. 2 liters is enough as the pre-chamber is only a fraction of the volume of the main chamber. A little HRF goes into the pre-chamber, some LRF goes into the main chamber all precisely measured at a very specific cylinder timing, and boom lots of power at a very efficient level. Meanwhile what you smell is partly burned cetane improver of the HRF and some inadvertent oil burning.Joseki wrote: ↑14 Aug 2017, 12:46godlameroso 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 read the blog post (and others too) and I don't those numbers are accurate at all: they are based on the assumption that every manufacturer works around the flow meter pumping more than 100 kg/h.
They may be close to reality but that would be more due to sheer luck than by a good technical calculation.