That doesnt mean anything. They spent the first 3 years hamstrung by the token system afterall. By the same argument they have always used air to air intercoolers, thus they wont switch to water coolers now either.
That doesnt mean anything. They spent the first 3 years hamstrung by the token system afterall. By the same argument they have always used air to air intercoolers, thus they wont switch to water coolers now either.
They have to redesign the whole plenum, a new MGU-H, a new intake layout. Probably a complete redesign of the cylinder heads.. Hence a completely new engine.. It makes more sense to work on their current layout,like Ferrari.
Red Bull has TAG Heuer badge. Maybe that gives scope to change things for the better??? Cooling, fuel, engine maps, PU ERS programming...CLKGTR wrote: ↑08 Mar 2018, 20:29Toto Wolff and I thinking about the same thing
http://classic.autosport.com/news/repor ... ostpopular
They were never actually burning what the public would consider an oil product. It was some kind of performance additive that toke the form of a vapor in the crankcase. Chances are very good that current F1 lubricants do not burn even as a vapor under current operating conditions.
That is the same turbo layout from 2014. Just the auxiliaries have changed.Blackout wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 13:21So I was right... except for the red part As you can see, the compressor's airbox is now located forward of the engine's rear mounting points. That means the whole turbo hase been pushed forward. The red-capped disc-shaped airbox seems to hang inside the V.. well almost.Blackout wrote: ↑23 Sep 2017, 16:18IMO one of the reasons that intake plenum is so swept forward is the need to free as much space as possible at the back of the V for the new compressor air duct... The new turbo seems to be much compact and closer to the PU, and the new compressor's intake has been placed inside the V, à la Ferrari, IMO (while it was outisde in 2014-2016)...
And maybe that plenum hides a small air-water intercooler too... or a diaphragm-like system
And the intake plenum bends forward to clear the way for the airbox... A 2014-2016 plenum would sit on the 2017 compressor inlet.
Couldnt find a good pic, but the 2014-2016 PU had its airbox aft the v6 mounting point so outside the engine.
So 2017 engine "2nd gen" is shorter/more compact.
Which, on paper, brings some benefits regarding weight distribution, pipework/lag, gearbox size/aero etc
https://servimg.com/view/14795526/2218
Doesn't make a lot of sense. Volatile enough be able to evaporate 500mL - 1L over <2 hours without ruining the lubricity of the lubricating oil in an engine running 15,000 rpm, and somehow providing a performance advantage of 5% or more, which is 10 times more than the energy available from burning the fluid going missing.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2018, 18:16They were never actually burning what the public would consider an oil product. It was some kind of performance additive that toke the form of a vapor in the crankcase. Chances are very good that current F1 lubricants do not burn even as a vapor under current operating conditions.
if it's some sort of combustion modifying additive, then surely it needs to make it into the combustion chamber. would be easy to arrange poor cylinder wall scraping or valve stem leakage. can't see how a vapour in the crankcase will produce a huge performance advantage.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑18 Mar 2018, 02:58Consuming a chemical in vapor form to create more power makes perfect sense.
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!