subcritical71 wrote: ↑05 Oct 2018, 14:36
Yes, it was posted a page or two ago (
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=21958&start=2895#p796171). Thanks again for it though. Which leads me back to what was said ~3:50.
gruntguru wrote: ↑05 Oct 2018, 06:48
I think the rules are being misinterpreted here. For one thing it is not possible to "spool" the compressor without creating boost. Try reading it this way:
5.1.6 Pressure charging
may only be effected by the use of a sole single stage compressor and
it may only be linked to (driven by) a sole single stage exhaust turbine and an electrical motor generator (MGU-H)
I'm not sure, but not convinced 100% either way either. The spool up part for instance, agreed you can't spool up without producing boost, however they may be able to spool until just as boost is increased, from the H, tough one to do and police in my eyes. You can have something connected and yet not able to drive it directly. There is a provision for a clutch also. The more I read it the more inclined I am to agree with Scarbs interpretation.
Has there ever been a team which has stated they use electric turbo/supercharging? I know, it's like asking if they have verified that they use spark plugs, but if they have said it directly then it could be put to bed.
Did I mishear @scarbs. I would not be convinced by an assertion that the MGU-H cannot drive the compressor. If that were the case there’d be no anti-lag, Honda’s “extra deploy” technique would be illegal, and finally boost would drop when the wastegates open.
The business of two batteries and extra sensors intrigues me. Firstly I don’t think the FIA fitted any more sensors in the early season tests. They explicitly said that this was difficult to do and they weren’t going to ask Ferrari to do so. Secondly, the regs say only one sensor to measure everything in and out of the ES. This implies, although it is not required explicitly, that there is only one connection between the ES management unit and the DC-DC converter attached to the CU-H and CU-K. The management unit can then connect as many cell combinations, “batteries”, as Ferrari want to fit.
I suggest two possible scenarios. Either Ferrari connect “directly” from the ES manager to the H, after all it’s unregulated in the regs, or the management unit creates a situation in switching between batteries that confuses the sensor into recording less energy transfer than actually happens. Such a scenario is the sort of thing that an employee might see in testing and then refine to reap a reward. There were reports earlier in the season about there being a specific cabling component to the way Ferrari gained an advantage from their twin batteries.
There is, of course, a third scenario in which there’s nothing happening. But that’s much less fun.
There
Fortune favours the prepared; she has no favourites and takes no sides.
Truth is confirmed by inspection and delay; falsehood by haste and uncertainty : Tacitus