I agree. Yesterday, I visited an F1 news outlet. They took the article from AMuS, and based solely on the information from AMuS, which I deem questionable, wrote a "technical analysis". What I got to read was frankly insane:saviour stivala wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 10:58When a source of information fires and pushes out at least half-a-dozen different technical items as being the possibility of speculated power gain and then a loss of power it goes to prove how speculative the source is.
Translation of that is:F1today.net wrote:Uiteindelijk was er het vermoeden dat Ferrari een systeem had ontwikkeld. Het was een systeem die een geheime opslag van energie had, waardoor de injectie op korte termijn de motor van meer brandstof vermengd met olie kon voorzien. Technische spotters vermoeden dat Ferrari de brandstof in de injectoren zou afkoelen. Anderen waren van mening dat de olie uit het koelcircuit in het verbrandingsproces zou zijn geïntroduceerd. Dit was in feite een geniale uitvinding. De olie die hiervoor gebruikt kon worden, is namelijk niet beperkt in haar verbruik.
Frankly, this is what you get when AMuS throws together rumors and suspicion like a madman. Safe to say the above is FAR from a technical analysis, but written by someone who has absolutely no idea what he or she is talking about. The very first sentence is an abomination where they try to link the whole battery saga to oil burning. So supposedly stored energy on a supposedly secret battery, which Whiting confirmed is not a secret battery to begin with, is somehow, SOMEHOW, being used to "mix more oil and fuel". I guess I have to start to believe that a perpetual engine exists, because in this case b*llsh*t creates more b*llsh*t.In the end there was the suspicion that Ferrari developed a system. It was a system with a secret storage of energy, which made that on the short term the injection of the engine mixed more oil and fuel. People who were looking for technical elements, suspect that Ferrari cools down the fuel inside the injectors. Other people think Ferrari used oil from the cooling system for burning. This was actual a genius move. The oil being used for this,does not count towards the maximum regulatory oil burning.
The source is as stated, AMuS, which I agree can be sketchy. We could say the same thing of HP figures, ERS strategy, or practically anything that comes out in the F1 ‘news’. That doesn’t mean we can’t have a discussion on it without somebody getting butt hurt about it, does it? Otherwise, how do we disprove or prove things from any source technically, personal opinion ?
I guess AMuS reasoning is similar Mercedes and Renault's. The Ferrari power boost was coming at a speed range where drag effects would be more pronounced.turbof1 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 11:22I agree. Yesterday, I visited an F1 news outlet. They took the article from AMuS, and based solely on the information from AMuS, which I deem questionable, wrote a "technical analysis". What I got to read was frankly insane:saviour stivala wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 10:58When a source of information fires and pushes out at least half-a-dozen different technical items as being the possibility of speculated power gain and then a loss of power it goes to prove how speculative the source is.
Translation of that is:F1today.net wrote:Uiteindelijk was er het vermoeden dat Ferrari een systeem had ontwikkeld. Het was een systeem die een geheime opslag van energie had, waardoor de injectie op korte termijn de motor van meer brandstof vermengd met olie kon voorzien. Technische spotters vermoeden dat Ferrari de brandstof in de injectoren zou afkoelen. Anderen waren van mening dat de olie uit het koelcircuit in het verbrandingsproces zou zijn geïntroduceerd. Dit was in feite een geniale uitvinding. De olie die hiervoor gebruikt kon worden, is namelijk niet beperkt in haar verbruik.Frankly, this is what you get when AMuS throws together rumors and suspicion like a madman. Safe to say the above is FAR from a technical analysis, but written by someone who has absolutely no idea what he or she is talking about. The very first sentence is an abomination where they try to link the whole battery saga to oil burning. So supposedly stored energy on a supposedly secret battery, which Whiting confirmed is not a secret battery to begin with, is somehow, SOMEHOW, being used to "mix more oil and fuel". I guess I have to start to believe that a perpetual engine exists, because in this case b*llsh*t creates more b*llsh*t.In the end there was the suspicion that Ferrari developed a system. It was a system with a secret storage of energy, which made that on the short term the injection of the engine mixed more oil and fuel. People who were looking for technical elements, suspect that Ferrari cools down the fuel inside the injectors. Other people think Ferrari used oil from the cooling system for burning. This was actual a genius move. The oil being used for this,does not count towards the maximum regulatory oil burning.
This is all due because Ferrari suddenly lost performance relative to Mercedes. I HOPE I can safeguard this place from the kind of nonesense like F1today wrote.
(To be clear Stivala: all the above is written to lament what AMuS has done)
No, but we do agree me asking for a source (for which I thank you of providing) is quite reasonable, isn't it? There are a few members around here who know quite a lot about fuel chemistry. I'll see if they can chip in.subcritical71 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 12:55The source is as stated, AMuS, which I agree can be sketchy. We could say the same thing of HP figures, ERS strategy, or practically anything that comes out in the F1 ‘news’. That doesn’t mean we can’t have a discussion on it without somebody getting butt hurt about it, does it? Otherwise, how do we disprove or prove things from any source technically, personal opinion ?
I did think about that. Of course that reasoning is correct. However, nobody usually calls it "energy" in that general sense. Usually we call it oil, fuel or (electric) energy. I find it more than reasonable to assume in the case of what F1today wrote, they actually meant electric energy with "energy". Usually we all do when discussing this.GrandAxe wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 13:21All energy (including electrical) available to an F1 car comes from the 100Kg fuel it carries. Therefore, if expected energy use doesn't fit after fitting weights and drag coefficients into their equations, then they might conclude that the 100Kg fuel limit is being breached somehow and speculate by what mechanism the extra energy is coming in.
This is not all that uncommon when you are on the bleeding edge of your technology and using ‘rare’ anything. Look at things like nuclear programs, uranium at its infancy was very difficult to get in quantities needed for a weapons test of just one bomb. And that was a government throwing what seemed like infinite resources at it. When carbon fiber was first developed, there wasn’t an endless supply for the demand that was created. Some piezoelectric crystals have gone virtually extinct and new solutions needed. Shell or any company, no matter their caliber, are going to be immune to these supply vs demand situations, if they have indeed found rare molecule that works in their application it is not unfathomable that they need to be deployed strategically to meet their supply.saviour stivala wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 10:58just imagine a company the caliber of SHELL pushing out a fuel to FERRARI that they cannot produce in quantity needed
It's the 0.001% distillation of unobtainium that is the problem, they just cannot get enough of itsubcritical71 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 13:51This is not all that uncommon when you are on the bleeding edge of your technology and using ‘rare’ anything. Look at things like nuclear programs, uranium at its infancy was very difficult to get in quantities needed for a weapons test of just one bomb. And that was a government throwing what seemed like infinite resources at it. When carbon fiber was first developed, there wasn’t an endless supply for the demand that was created. Some piezoelectric crystals have gone virtually extinct and new solutions needed. Shell or any company, no matter their caliber, are going to be immune to these supply vs demand situations, if they have indeed found rare molecule that works in their application it is not unfathomable that they need to be deployed strategically to meet their supply.saviour stivala wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 10:58just imagine a company the caliber of SHELL pushing out a fuel to FERRARI that they cannot produce in quantity needed
It's a bit like an onion. You have the F1 teams, the engineers, the insiders who are right in the middle. Then, in an outer layer, you have predominantly people of the press or others, who have connections to those inside. They might be friends, relatives, ex-employees, former drivers, members of the press or business associates or some other connection. Most of them follow the F1 circus around the globe, making a living off reporting it. In another layer outside around this layer, you have other publications. Some of them are run by people who have no connection to F1 (other than passion) whatsoever. They don't know anyone from the inside, they don't attend the F1 events, they simply report/copy of what they read from others. Sometimes, they do a poor job at passing on this information, perhaps as a result of their lack of technical knowledge and what turns out is a story that is very different from the original source. It gets worse, as sites copy copied material and the information gets diluted even more to the point it either makes little sense and is not accurate at all. Or they add more stuff that makes us wonder if they actually are the most reliable source.
Yes, much better and elaborately said than I can do. Thanks for that summary.Phil wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 15:47It's a bit like an onion. You have the F1 teams, the engineers, the insiders who are right in the middle. Then, in an outer layer, you have predominantly people of the press or others, who have connections to those inside. They might be friends, relatives, ex-employees, former drivers, members of the press or business associates or some other connection. Most of them follow the F1 circus around the globe, making a living off reporting it. In another layer outside around this layer, you have other publications. Some of them are run by people who have no connection to F1 (other than passion) whatsoever. They don't know anyone from the inside, they don't attend the F1 events, they simply report/copy of what they read from others. Sometimes, they do a poor job at passing on this information, perhaps as a result of their lack of technical knowledge and what turns out is a story that is very different from the original source. It gets worse, as sites copy copied material and the information gets diluted even more to the point it either makes little sense and is not accurate at all. Or they add more stuff that makes us wonder if they actually are the most reliable source.
Lets say we have 3 layers:
A - Insiders
B - Press, ex-employees etc, people with connections to those inside
C - Publications with no links/sources. They mainly report what others already reported
From those, I would definitely put what is usually reported on AMuS to be in layer B. They are clearly not insiders, but they report a lot of stuff that can not be found elsewhere. They [at least Michael Schmid] seem to be a genuine well informed member of the press, who attend these races, network with people who either worked for teams or still do.
They post a lot of pictures from the actual events, they pick out details about the cars and illustrate them on their website and they also report on things they hear from inside the paddock. Is everything they report factually correct? No, of course not. But where there is smoke, well, sometimes there is fire too. Joe Saward is also one individual who posts a lot of inside information and he is clearly someone who is very close to the inside.
At the very least, we should be happy that we do get these rumors and technical bits and pieces because the more we have and read, the better we can try to analyze, discuss and dissect here at F1T. Is there any truth to the FIA 2nd sensor? Who knows. I do believe that when AMuS report it, they heard someone inside the paddock talk about it. At the very least, there's merit to discussing it. If not that, what else is left to discuss without any information available? Quite similar to the Honda-topic with Wazari. If you believe he is who he says he is, is beyond the point. With his input, it generated hundredths of pages of ideas and technical analysis that in the end gave us a much better understanding.
The way some here are slamming what some publications report as being rumors (even when they are clearly labeled as such) makes me think they are simply out to damage the credibility of the source in order to defend their team from any perceived wrong doing. I'd much rather be discussing the possibilities on how credible certain rumors are and sometimes, assume they are correct to see what theories can be explored, rather than automatically assuming everything is a lie and part of an agenda to... well, I haven't quite figured out what the agenda of such a large publication would be for spreading incorrect information to that extent.
To be fare, Ferrari is doing themselves no favors by not denying it.turbof1 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 16:49Let's not make it a debate about credibility either, Phil. I'm not questioning the media in general. I'm questioning in this very case what AMuS has done: frankly they made a bit of a Frankenstein articles, throwing bits here and there together which no other source has yet confirmed. Especially the latter concerns me. Nobody else is confirming this. F1 Media digging out dirty secrets is a blessing, but you have to stay and keep thinking critical. Where's smoke, there's someone making a fire. Would not be the first time a media outlet is making the fire.
We'll get comments on this rolling; that is what I am waiting for.dans79 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 17:28To be fare, Ferrari is doing themselves no favors by not denying it.turbof1 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2018, 16:49Let's not make it a debate about credibility either, Phil. I'm not questioning the media in general. I'm questioning in this very case what AMuS has done: frankly they made a bit of a Frankenstein articles, throwing bits here and there together which no other source has yet confirmed. Especially the latter concerns me. Nobody else is confirming this. F1 Media digging out dirty secrets is a blessing, but you have to stay and keep thinking critical. Where's smoke, there's someone making a fire. Would not be the first time a media outlet is making the fire.
Usually when a high profile individual or company is called out in the press for doing something inappropriate that isn't true, they make a public statement or send out a press release denying the accusations. Depending on the type of accusations, even legal action might be initiated.