"Honda will increase its F1 budget by 50 per cent for 2018," he said. "It is the funds freed up by the McLaren sponsorship."
"Honda will increase its F1 budget by 50 per cent for 2018," he said. "It is the funds freed up by the McLaren sponsorship."
It's why the combustion CFD is so important, with good models you can predict what goes on and to a certain extent control it, this is tremendous as far as design is concerned. You can play with all variables, it's especially important as far as injection timing, and spray patterns are concerned, and now to a greater extent, the geometry of the combustion chambers, and the intake and exhaust ports. Although there's still a fair bit of development still needed in those last two.ncassi22 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 00:20Would the issue not be a control and excessive cylinder pressure issue? Ultra lean Lean HCCI can be assisted by TJI/CVCC to ignite reliably (Forced into HCCI mode). Nice thing about these MGU-H assisted turbos, are that you can get high boost pressures at lower RPM and load - maybe do psuedo HCCI in these lower reaches to increase economy.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Oct 2017, 15:20The way HCCI works it is not suitable for F1 engines at high rpms... Hcci is compression ignition which is too slow for f1.
TJI is what we know is used in Ferrari Mercedes and Renault. Honda is yet to be confirmed but it was alluded to by hasegawa that the engine has all the
" lastest" technologies.
So Honda was spending ~$350 million per season to develop these engines and pay for drivers and for McLaren to develop the car? McLaren must be sure of their chassis if they're willing to lose that. If the engine is worth 1 second they'd still be behind the top 3, and off the pace by .7 seconds, they would need to luck into a podium.bigblue wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 01:03Marko to visit Honda HQ after Malaysia (at grandprix.com)
"Honda will increase its F1 budget by 50 per cent for 2018," he said. "It is the funds freed up by the McLaren sponsorship."
The dimples would increase turbulence in this instance? The dimples would not be uniform in size or distribution? Perhaps to control the pressure distribution in the chamber during the compression and power strokes?Wazari wrote: ↑01 Oct 2017, 23:53Port dimpling..........by doing so you are increasing the surface area of the port which is typically not a desired thing. Interesting things can be done and accomplished by piston crown dimpling........possible point to ponder.
Also I think some might be getting CVCC and HCCI confused with each other. They are not the same technology.
They are either hand finished as cast or cnc ported from castings, then left in their cnc ported state or hand finished on top of that.godlameroso wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 01:28The dimples would increase turbulence in this instance? The dimples would not be uniform in size or distribution? Perhaps to control the pressure distribution in the chamber during the compression and power strokes?Wazari wrote: ↑01 Oct 2017, 23:53Port dimpling..........by doing so you are increasing the surface area of the port which is typically not a desired thing. Interesting things can be done and accomplished by piston crown dimpling........possible point to ponder.
Also I think some might be getting CVCC and HCCI confused with each other. They are not the same technology.
Final question, are the finishes on the ports similar to this old V10 head? (~320 grit uniform)
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=15385
Or is the finish not uniform on the intake?
Thats what I'm talking about. It could be a combination. It's clear that for HCCI very special conditions are needed. So the manufacturers could use traditional spark ignition just when it's needed, like in very low or very high rpm.ncassi22 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 00:20HCCI ignition is quicker than SI. Would the issue not be a control and excessive cylinder pressure issue? Ultra lean Lean HCCI can be assisted by TJI/CVCC to ignite reliably (Forced into HCCI mode). Nice thing about these MGU-H assisted turbos, are that you can get high boost pressures at lower RPM and load - maybe do psuedo HCCI in these lower reaches to increase economy.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Oct 2017, 15:20The way HCCI works it is not suitable for F1 engines at high rpms... Hcci is compression ignition which is too slow for f1.
TJI is what we know is used in Ferrari Mercedes and Renault. Honda is yet to be confirmed but it was alluded to by hasegawa that the engine has all the
" lastest" technologies.
Specific temperatures are needed to ignite the mixture by itself, but this is also where earlier attempts at gasoline-powered HCCI engines have failed: ambient temperatures are critical.
Should the outside temperatures be too hot or too cold, it wreaks havoc on the HCCI process: temperatures that are too high create engine knock, while those that are too cold can hurt the ignition system itself.
An interesting fact about what Hasegawa is talking about.Hasegawa:
- "I've hit various hands, such as raising low-speed torque, and as a result I think that I got to a position that the point can aim for.I think that it is a big progress that the reliability problem disappeared. It is also important to not have any trouble in. Finish is our minimum responsibility. "
- "Belgium was totally beaten.In Mzza the shaft of MGU - K broke, but at least, we were able to fully demonstrate our abilities in Malaysia, our job is to make full use of our abilities I can not do anything beyond that, I am satisfied in that sense. "
- "As to power, I changed the setting of the engine from Monza so I'm going to give power, in Belgium I only used the output I used in qualifying mode, in Monza for racing so so I think I was able to run a lot in the race, and this time, it definitely works. "
- "I'd like to take this tune with the Japanese GP as well"
Vandoorne made a mistake in corner 2 I believe?HPD wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 18:59Translated by Google (it's a little confusing)
An interesting fact about what Hasegawa is talking about.Hasegawa:
- "I've hit various hands, such as raising low-speed torque, and as a result I think that I got to a position that the point can aim for.I think that it is a big progress that the reliability problem disappeared. It is also important to not have any trouble in. Finish is our minimum responsibility. "
- "Belgium was totally beaten.In Mzza the shaft of MGU - K broke, but at least, we were able to fully demonstrate our abilities in Malaysia, our job is to make full use of our abilities I can not do anything beyond that, I am satisfied in that sense. "
- "As to power, I changed the setting of the engine from Monza so I'm going to give power, in Belgium I only used the output I used in qualifying mode, in Monza for racing so so I think I was able to run a lot in the race, and this time, it definitely works. "
- "I'd like to take this tune with the Japanese GP as well"
In Belgium, Honda released a 26 HP engine map. (only for classification)
In Malaysia. The first 7 laps:
- Vandoorne was controlling Perez without DRS
- Alonso controlled Vettel.
Lap 8:
- Perez beats Vandoorne.
- Vettel beats Alonso.
No dimples on the ports. Port finish is uniform but finer than 320 grit.godlameroso wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 01:28The dimples would increase turbulence in this instance? The dimples would not be uniform in size or distribution? Perhaps to control the pressure distribution in the chamber during the compression and power strokes?
Final question, are the finishes on the ports similar to this old V10 head? (~320 grit uniform)
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=15385
Or is the finish not uniform on the intake?
Franz Tost:
"When I go to Japan for the Japanese Grand Prix, there is a meeting at the Tokyo headquarters where there should be a detailed exchange of information on our car and Honda's power unit. At this time, I think that things are going forward, next year's car will have a new monocoque, especially the rear part of the monocoque carrying the Honda's power unit will be a new design, the cooling system and the gearbox will be newly designed. The director in charge is also checking the development time ahead. "
"Since I am different from what I am using the power unit and Honda that I am using now, I think that it is necessary to make a major review, but I believe that problems will not occur much."
Interesting that the ports use uniform finishes, I suppose using different finishes on the roof vs floor of the port has no benefit or they'd be doing it.Wazari wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 21:51No dimples on the ports. Port finish is uniform but finer than 320 grit.godlameroso wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 01:28The dimples would increase turbulence in this instance? The dimples would not be uniform in size or distribution? Perhaps to control the pressure distribution in the chamber during the compression and power strokes?
Final question, are the finishes on the ports similar to this old V10 head? (~320 grit uniform)
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=15385
Or is the finish not uniform on the intake?
Extrude Honing is too crude for any serious port finishing as you have zero control over where it removes material.godlameroso wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 22:02Interesting that the ports use uniform finishes, I suppose using different finishes on the roof vs floor of the port has no benefit or they'd be doing it.Wazari wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 21:51No dimples on the ports. Port finish is uniform but finer than 320 grit.godlameroso wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 01:28The dimples would increase turbulence in this instance? The dimples would not be uniform in size or distribution? Perhaps to control the pressure distribution in the chamber during the compression and power strokes?
Final question, are the finishes on the ports similar to this old V10 head? (~320 grit uniform)
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=15385
Or is the finish not uniform on the intake?
Is extrusion honing crude in comparison to the type of finishing taking place?
This also means that spec 4 not coming to SuzukaHPD wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 18:59Translated by Google (it's a little confusing)
An interesting fact about what Hasegawa is talking about.Hasegawa:
- "I've hit various hands, such as raising low-speed torque, and as a result I think that I got to a position that the point can aim for.I think that it is a big progress that the reliability problem disappeared. It is also important to not have any trouble in. Finish is our minimum responsibility. "
- "Belgium was totally beaten.In Mzza the shaft of MGU - K broke, but at least, we were able to fully demonstrate our abilities in Malaysia, our job is to make full use of our abilities I can not do anything beyond that, I am satisfied in that sense. "
- "As to power, I changed the setting of the engine from Monza so I'm going to give power, in Belgium I only used the output I used in qualifying mode, in Monza for racing so so I think I was able to run a lot in the race, and this time, it definitely works. "
- "I'd like to take this tune with the Japanese GP as well"
In Belgium, Honda released a 26 HP engine map. (only for classification)
In Malaysia. The first 7 laps:
- Vandoorne was controlling Perez without DRS
- Alonso controlled Vettel.
Lap 8:
- Perez beats Vandoorne.
- Vettel beats Alonso.
I guess it could be interesting but it's also pretty normal in the world of heads.godlameroso wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 22:02Interesting that the ports use uniform finishes, I suppose using different finishes on the roof vs floor of the port has no benefit or they'd be doing it.
ncassi22 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 00:20HCCI ignition is quicker than SI. Would the issue not be a control and excessive cylinder pressure issue? Ultra lean Lean HCCI can be assisted by TJI/CVCC to ignite reliably (Forced into HCCI mode). Nice thing about these MGU-H assisted turbos, are that you can get high boost pressures at lower RPM and load - maybe do psuedo HCCI in these lower reaches to increase economy.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Oct 2017, 15:20The way HCCI works it is not suitable for F1 engines at high rpms... Hcci is compression ignition which is too slow for f1.
TJI is what we know is used in Ferrari Mercedes and Renault. Honda is yet to be confirmed but it was alluded to by hasegawa that the engine has all the
" lastest" technologies.