I don't think so, bacause Kvyat used a new PU in FP2 and the honda issue occured during FP1.ispano6 wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 16:54Kvyat PU issues might be due to turning the wick up to see what happens. He topped the top speed charts during that FP2 session. Sakura team will need to ascertain the nature of the failure but there likely won't be any stop gap measures until Spain, unless Honda has a fix that doesn't require restricted elements changes.
Thanks, so maybe that explains his top speed in FP2 and Albon's dicing through the midfield. Fresher PUs or maybe even some slightly tweaked differences from the previous. Knowing Honda if they are going to resort to a PU change then they would take the opportunity to bring in a newer spec or version, regardless how small or unrecognizable it may be. It's also entirely likely it's an identical unit.HondaPOD wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 21:19I don't think so, bacause Kvyat used a new PU in FP2 and the honda issue occured during FP1.ispano6 wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 16:54Kvyat PU issues might be due to turning the wick up to see what happens. He topped the top speed charts during that FP2 session. Sakura team will need to ascertain the nature of the failure but there likely won't be any stop gap measures until Spain, unless Honda has a fix that doesn't require restricted elements changes.
This is an interesting development from MB. Very eager to see Honda's carbon nanotube R&D put to use and recent latest battery tech. Will we see sodium and fluoride-ion batteries in F1 soon?atanatizante wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 09:35Seems they will shift towards solid-state technology battery now which is a good step forward ...
Now whether is lithium-ion or another tech it has to be seen ...
https://twitter.com/MercedesBenz/status ... 6390293504
Are the teams using wet cell technology currently?ispano6 wrote: ↑19 Apr 2019, 19:40This is an interesting development from MB. Very eager to see Honda's carbon nanotube R&D put to use and recent latest battery tech. Will we see sodium and fluoride-ion batteries in F1 soon?atanatizante wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 09:35Seems they will shift towards solid-state technology battery now which is a good step forward ...
Now whether is lithium-ion or another tech it has to be seen ...
https://twitter.com/MercedesBenz/status ... 6390293504
https://www.thedrive.com/tech/25354/hon ... -operation
https://www.motor1.com/news/18054/honda ... velopment/
That sounds similar to MIT's flow battery technology from a few years back. Personally, I feel the flow battery concept is genius for production vehicles in that you could likely leverage existing gasoline station and tank infrastructure simply replacing petrol with electrolyte fluid, reducing charge times and reducing the need of chargers. But for Formula 1, Honda's fluoride-ion innovation is intriguing given that solid state batteries require high operating temperatures. The development gains to be had now reside in the realm of the ERS and ES and it will be interesting to see if being in other categories like WEC, Formula E and Super GT will give manufacturers an edge in development.Zynerji wrote: ↑19 Apr 2019, 21:36Are the teams using wet cell technology currently?ispano6 wrote: ↑19 Apr 2019, 19:40This is an interesting development from MB. Very eager to see Honda's carbon nanotube R&D put to use and recent latest battery tech. Will we see sodium and fluoride-ion batteries in F1 soon?atanatizante wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 09:35Seems they will shift towards solid-state technology battery now which is a good step forward ...
Now whether is lithium-ion or another tech it has to be seen ...
https://twitter.com/MercedesBenz/status ... 6390293504
https://www.thedrive.com/tech/25354/hon ... -operation
https://www.motor1.com/news/18054/honda ... velopment/
I know Wayne Pickette (of Intel fame) is working on a technology that holds an electrolyte liquid in the matrix of a hydroscopic-like ceramic core for EV batteries. I was expecting that we were moving from solid-state 18650 cells to a higher density wet cell.
Would love to learn more.
This all is completely irrelevant to F1 at least up to the point of upcoming regulation changes. Probably even longer. This will be used in road cars and MB absolutely needs those 20% improvement to close the gap to Tesla/Panasonic. Tesla/Panasonic is years ahead of everyone when it comes to road car battery technology.ispano6 wrote: ↑19 Apr 2019, 19:40This is an interesting development from MB. Very eager to see Honda's carbon nanotube R&D put to use and recent latest battery tech. Will we see sodium and fluoride-ion batteries in F1 soon?atanatizante wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 09:35Seems they will shift towards solid-state technology battery now which is a good step forward ...
Now whether is lithium-ion or another tech it has to be seen ...
https://twitter.com/MercedesBenz/status ... 6390293504
https://www.thedrive.com/tech/25354/hon ... -operation
https://www.motor1.com/news/18054/honda ... velopment/
So you are saying ERS and ES hardware is dictated by Formula 1 and theres no area for R&D gains in this department until next regulation change?gandharva wrote: ↑20 Apr 2019, 11:52This all is completely irrelevant to F1 at least up to the point of upcoming regulation changes. Probably even longer. This will be used in road cars and MB absolutely needs those 20% improvement to close the gap to Tesla/Panasonic. Tesla/Panasonic is years ahead of everyone when it comes to road car battery technology.ispano6 wrote: ↑19 Apr 2019, 19:40This is an interesting development from MB. Very eager to see Honda's carbon nanotube R&D put to use and recent latest battery tech. Will we see sodium and fluoride-ion batteries in F1 soon?atanatizante wrote: ↑18 Apr 2019, 09:35Seems they will shift towards solid-state technology battery now which is a good step forward ...
Now whether is lithium-ion or another tech it has to be seen ...
https://twitter.com/MercedesBenz/status ... 6390293504
https://www.thedrive.com/tech/25354/hon ... -operation
https://www.motor1.com/news/18054/honda ... velopment/
This "newer" technology (MB announcement) is not even state of the art. So why bother using it? Furthermore, the requirements for road cars are very different from Formula 1.
We're not talking about Mercedes announcement though, we're talking about Hondas/NASA fluoride-ion and Hondas carbon nanotube research. Lithium technology is on its last legs. You'd be surprised how much overlap there is with Honda road and race car technology with R&D. I don't know whether to be proud or embarrassed to say that the Formula 1 engine shares parts with a Civic engine, but not everything that goes into the engine is "bespoke", but I'm sure it meets requirements
More power even if just for one lap will increase the chance to pull off an effective undercut.“But we see after the pit stops, both Ferrari and Mercedes, it looks like they go back into a qualifying setting, particularly Sebastian [Vettel]. His one lap pace showed he did a 34.8s and then suddenly he is in the 36s. There is one standout lap.”