The ideal wastegate would force the blowdown pressure pulse through the turbine housing then vent the rest of the exhaust flow directly to atmosphere. Not an expert on fluidic valves and such, but I imagine this must be possible to at least some extent - imagine a gap between the header tubes and the turbine housing but high pressure pulses reaching the turbine due to the header being "aimed at" the turbine entry. Think of a Pelton Wheel vs a Francis turbine. https://www.explainthatstuff.com/turbines.html Scroll down to impulse vs reaction turbines.
Phillip. What is the difference between a diverter valve and a bypass valve?.
Seems unlikely: the braking time is short, the surplus energy is small and the fuel consumption high. Add to that the extra mass of the braking system and instability under downshift while managing PU output
Hmm .. I've never thought a turbocharger as having impulse or reaction type blading. I'm used to seeing those terms as applied to Steam or Gas turbines which are axial flow engines. Reaction stages will produce the most power, with the same size unit, but sacrifices a small bit of efficiency. Impulse stages can only do about 1/3 the power of a reaction (again, for the same size)dren wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 12:44I wonder if a dual stage turbine would pass the regulations if you only used one stage at any given time? That way you aren't compromising your reaction turbine for impulse generation. Not likely it would, but maybe you could get away with calling it a single stage.
You're probably only covering maybe half of the compressor power, so it might not be worth the added weight, complexity. Any impulse recovery on a turbine designed for reaction efficiency would likely be very small I'd guess.
The Mercedes engineers noticed that Ferrari can call up more electrical power at the end of the straight. Hamilton reaches his top speed of 320.8 km/h on the Hangar Straight at 4,719 kilometers. At the same point, Vettel is 321.9 km/h fast. Over the next 200 metres the Mercedes reduces slightly in speed and drops to 319 km/h. In contrast, the Ferrari continues to accelerate, reaching around 325.2 km/h at 4,845 kilometres and then dropping to over 320 km/h at 4,929 kilometres.
Some sort of aerodynamic wizardry sounds more plausible imo. Otherwise, why wouldn't you use the excess energy you have at the beginning of the straight?
Exactly. So they probably have improved their PU even more, changed the ERS strategy to match (3) a very clever aero. Very impressive imho.
I’m fairly certain that the 40hp figure that was being thrown around, wasnt mean as 40hp through sheer engine performance, but “normalized”. E.g. if you assume equal cars, identical aero, the sheer performance advantage the Ferrari pulls out on the straights would equal a 40hp advantage.
These figures are interesting.MtthsMlw wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 15:24Some hp figures calculated by RB (via AMuS):
From Silverstone Qualifying:
Additionally the data also shows that Ferrari is able to deploy energy longer than Merc, at least on the Hangar Straight.The Mercedes engineers noticed that Ferrari can call up more electrical power at the end of the straight. Hamilton reaches his top speed of 320.8 km/h on the Hangar Straight at 4,719 kilometers. At the same point, Vettel is 321.9 km/h fast. Over the next 200 metres the Mercedes reduces slightly in speed and drops to 319 km/h. In contrast, the Ferrari continues to accelerate, reaching around 325.2 km/h at 4,845 kilometres and then dropping to over 320 km/h at 4,929 kilometres.
They are, same as Mercedes is.