I did not say that when waste-gates are fully open they block the flow to the turbine, what I was saying was that when the waste-gates are fully open they are meant to bypass exhaust gasses away from the turbine. and when partial open (slightly open/cracked open) they help the H spool the turbo faster with less back prssure.
No i was not saying anything of the sort. i do not know what Honda was or is doing, what I know is were Honda was/is re the others. As a reference to the subject proper No I was not saying anything of the sort at all, what I was saying was the waste-gates are cracked open on corner exit (some corners) so as to help the H spool the turbo faster with less back pressure. This mode was arrived at way before the new hybrids even ran on track for the first time. For proper and full explanation refer to “Optimal control theory and FERRARI’s turbo-electric hybrid”.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑07 Jan 2019, 17:46the Honda telemetry data presumably has shown us what Honda do (or did)saviour stivala wrote: ↑07 Jan 2019, 09:40.... but the F1 waste-gate/s are also used to relieve turbine pressure in race mode out of a corner when they are momentarily cracked open so the MGU-H spooling-up is made faster.....
presumably they don't pull the H rpm down any further than is right for the corner exit
you seem to be saying that the corner exit driving is done using wastegating as a substitute throttle
ok it's likely the wastegate actuation has a even smaller response 'time constant' than does the MGU-H
btw there's throttling on the intake side (of the engine - and the compressor ???)
The valve sizes that I quoted (41mm intake and 32.65mm exhaust that were used on a 96-98mm diameter bore of the NA engines were the biggest used that I know off and that was giving a valve area to bore area of 37.25%. as I said, I cannot see how such big diameter or even bigger diameter valves and porting can be used on an 80mm diameter bore, BUT I have no doubt that the valve to bore area not only matches that of which I was talking about, but most probably was improved upon.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑07 Jan 2019, 22:47They can't block flow to the turbine, turbine would be making a vacuum that way.
If the valve dimensions of Saviour above are scaled down to a 80mm bore, the maximum wastegate tailpipe cross section is just slightly bigger than the total valve sectional area of 1 cylinder.
Can someone explain why you would want to open the waste-gate while spooling up the turbine while accelerating? Seems once accelerating you are in the powerband and you want to use the energy in the exhaust gasses? OR is the rising pressure due to spooling up the turbine having such an impact on properly scavenging the cylinder?
I suppose this is what you are referring to: http://vdol.mae.ufl.edu/JournalPublicat ... covery.pdfsaviour stivala wrote: ↑07 Jan 2019, 23:55As a reference to the subject proper No I was not saying anything of the sort at all, what I was saying was the waste-gates are cracked open on corner exit (some corners) so as to help the H spool the turbo faster with less back pressure. This mode was arrived at way before the new hybrids even ran on track for the first time. For proper and full explanation refer to “Optimal control theory and FERRARI’s turbo-electric hybrid”.
Very unlikely. The quickest way to spool the turbo would be wastegate closed plus MGUH motoring. The only reason you might open the wastegate during acceleration is to reduce backpressure on the engine and probably not during spooling.saviour stivala wrote: ↑07 Jan 2019, 23:50. . . . and when partial open (slightly open/cracked open) they help the H spool the turbo faster with less back prssure.
Your idea of how the wastegate works is inverted. When wastegates are open there is less flow to turn the compressor and the MGUH has to do all the work by itself. When the wastegates are closed there is more energy going into turning the compressor.saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Jan 2019, 00:09The valve sizes that I quoted (41mm intake and 32.65mm exhaust that were used on a 96-98mm diameter bore of the NA engines were the biggest used that I know off and that was giving a valve area to bore area of 37.25%. as I said, I cannot see how such big diameter or even bigger diameter valves and porting can be used on an 80mm diameter bore, BUT I have no doubt that the valve to bore area not only matches that of which I was talking about, but most probably was improved upon.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑07 Jan 2019, 22:47They can't block flow to the turbine, turbine would be making a vacuum that way.
If the valve dimensions of Saviour above are scaled down to a 80mm bore, the maximum wastegate tailpipe cross section is just slightly bigger than the total valve sectional area of 1 cylinder.
Can someone explain why you would want to open the waste-gate while spooling up the turbine while accelerating? Seems once accelerating you are in the powerband and you want to use the energy in the exhaust gasses? OR is the rising pressure due to spooling up the turbine having such an impact on properly scavenging the cylinder?
I did not say that you was compering the exhaust ports to the NA engine, No it was not you.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑08 Jan 2019, 05:28Your idea of how the wastegate works is inverted. When wastegates are open there is less flow to turn the compressor and the MGUH has to do all the work by itself. When the wastegates are closed there is more energy going into turning the compressor.saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Jan 2019, 00:09The valve sizes that I quoted (41mm intake and 32.65mm exhaust that were used on a 96-98mm diameter bore of the NA engines were the biggest used that I know off and that was giving a valve area to bore area of 37.25%. as I said, I cannot see how such big diameter or even bigger diameter valves and porting can be used on an 80mm diameter bore, BUT I have no doubt that the valve to bore area not only matches that of which I was talking about, but most probably was improved upon.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑07 Jan 2019, 22:47They can't block flow to the turbine, turbine would be making a vacuum that way.
If the valve dimensions of Saviour above are scaled down to a 80mm bore, the maximum wastegate tailpipe cross section is just slightly bigger than the total valve sectional area of 1 cylinder.
Can someone explain why you would want to open the waste-gate while spooling up the turbine while accelerating? Seems once accelerating you are in the powerband and you want to use the energy in the exhaust gasses? OR is the rising pressure due to spooling up the turbine having such an impact on properly scavenging the cylinder?
But anyway.. I see you are also talking avout my commeng that the renault exhaust ports looks small.
At no point did i compare them to the NA engines as you said.
It is an interesting topic. For all I know these turbo engine produce over 800horsepower at far leaner mixtures and with far less cylinders.. The air density is higher of course... Maybe three times higher... But i do not expect that the port size would be so much reduced.??
Semantics matter here. The turbine is bypassed by _some_ of the exhaust flow; the way you're wording it, it comes out as though none of the exhaust gasses interacts with the turbine wheel. This is done to reduce engine back pressure (and also to take loading off of the turbine wheel - although this is probably not done to a very large degree what ever.)saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Jan 2019, 08:50“The turbine is bypassed by a controllable waste-gate,: Closing the waste-gate will increase the power generated by the MGU-H, But will decrease the power generated by the engine”.
@saviour stivala is quoting from the Limebeer paper @mudflap provided above.hurril wrote: ↑08 Jan 2019, 20:37Semantics matter here. The turbine is bypassed by _some_ of the exhaust flow; the way you're wording it, it comes out as though none of the exhaust gasses interacts with the turbine wheel. This is done to reduce engine back pressure (and also to take loading off of the turbine wheel - although this is probably not done to a very large degree what ever.)saviour stivala wrote: ↑08 Jan 2019, 08:50“The turbine is bypassed by a controllable waste-gate,: Closing the waste-gate will increase the power generated by the MGU-H, But will decrease the power generated by the engine”.
Hey don't accuse me I am just trying to figure out Saviours theory.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑08 Jan 2019, 05:28Your idea of how the wastegate works is inverted. When wastegates are open there is less flow to turn the compressor and the MGUH has to do all the work by itself. When the wastegates are closed there is more energy going into turning the compressor.
But anyway.. I see you are also talking avout my commeng that the renault exhaust ports looks small.
At no point did i compare them to the NA engines as you said.
It is an interesting topic. For all I know these turbo engine produce over 800horsepower at far leaner mixtures and with far less cylinders.. The air density is higher of course... Maybe three times higher... But i do not expect that the port size would be so much reduced.??