Thanks for this suggestion, this is interesting. Not sure if it would be legal under the regs (is more than one energy store, or more than one method of storage, allowed?). I recall a system by Volvo suggested for their road cars which used jets of compressed air as an anti-lag system to spool up the turbocharger more quickly (https://www.carmagazine.co.uk/car-news/ ... -may-2016/).VFC_Cipher wrote: ↑30 Aug 2018, 14:18
Inject pressurized air stream into the turbine housing and drive the overrun of -H while harvesting to harvest more and quicker but also when needed to drive harder/faster during qualy or race situations.
Not really sure, but I think the concept has legs. Compressed air canisters are available in a variety or pressures and light weight materials.
I am not looking to defend this as a thesis, but I wanted to contribute if i could. Hopefully this makes something click for you guys that are all significantly smarter that I am and much better with the regs. Thanks for the indulgence.
This could potentially be used to drive the turbocharger (and thus MGU-H --> Battery) by directing a jet of compressed air directly at the turbine blades whilst leaving the wastegates open for the exhaust gases to bypass the turbine. This would obviously require a method of recharging the compressed air over time.
Again, it might be a question of whether the method of energy storage is allowed in the rules (or rather explicitly forbidden by them). As some have pointed out, an overweight MGU-H is technically a flywheel storage system....
Interesting post, thanks.