Continuing upon using valve overlap to explain 1.29, we may also consider 5.3.6, the latter defined as:
No cylinder of the engine may have a geometric compression ratio higher than 18.0.
'Cylinder' in the regs, as I read them, seems to mean the swept volume of the piston inside a cylinder. This ignores combustion chamber volume.
Suppose the intake and exhaust valves are open through the intake stroke and the first half of the compression stroke. A geometric compression ratio of the 36 would be required to achieve an effective compression ratio of 18.
If air dilution is being achieved through valve overlap and Atkinson-type partial-stroke compression, these two rules would be a way to limit that.
The efficiency formula and high a:f ratios should imply that there will always be a portion of compressor charge inside the combustion chamber which is not being used for combustion. Oxygen sensors in the exhaust should reveal that such a rule is always being transgressed.
1158 wrote: ↑26 Jan 2018, 03:28
Although since fuel can't be injected upstream or downstream of the CC I guess that implies air in the CC is the air destined for combustion. Any benefit to injecting water after the combustion event during the exhaust stroke?
An interesting idea, adding mass and steam pressure to the exhaust flow. Another way to transfer more work to the turbine, a pseudo sixth-stroke. But likely precluded by:
5.8.1 With the exception of incidental leakage through joints (either into or out of the system) and power unit breather fluids, all and only the fluids entering the compressor inlet and fuel injectors must exit from the engine exhaust system.
This limits a water injector to only be placed pre-compressor. And 1.29 prevents passing compressor charge air, water-laden or not, from entering the exhaust because it is was not used for combustion.
A couple more 2018 additions I missed before:
5.1.11 An insert within a PU component is a minimal, non-dismountable part whose function is solely to locally support a function of this component. The total volume of inserts within the component cannot be more than 10% of the total volume of the component.
5.1.12 All power unit breather fluids may only vent to atmosphere and must pass through an orifice which is positioned rearward of the rear axle centre line and less than 400mm above the reference plane and less than 100mm from the car centre plane. No breather fluids may re-enter the power unit.
5.1.12 is yet another oil ingestion reference. I count four so far. It replaces a now-omitted rule which had stated that all sump-breather gases must pass through the engine in order to prevent oil-spillage on track. A reversal of intent.
It would be interesting to know the history of the sump-breather-gas-ingestion-for-safety rule. Was it suggested by those with ulterior motives, or was it subverted after-the-fact?