Hi,
I would like to know for what purposes is the pneumatic system used on a F1 car.
Is it only for pneumatic valves or it serves other systems too?
No they don't rpm vise. But as far as i know pneumatic valve springs can be set up relatively soft compared to a mechanical spring for the same rpm/valve setup. So they end up with a few extra horses by still using them.
Do they 'release' the pressure as the cam lobe rises? if there is no (or little, plus the pressure in the cylinder) resistance, it must save a huge amount of lost power in both force and friction. I had never considered this before. It only needs to stop the valve dropping off its seat until it 'follows' the close profile. Would the air be quick enough venting to do this?
Not based on what has been published to date - they only have a PRV that opens when pressure increases from oil accumulation in the pneumatic volume. This doesn't happen every cycle.Big Tea wrote: ↑29 Jun 2019, 23:56Do they 'release' the pressure as the cam lobe rises? if there is no (or little, plus the pressure in the cylinder) resistance, it must save a huge amount of lost power in both force and friction. I had never considered this before. It only needs to stop the valve dropping off its seat until it 'follows' the close profile. Would the air be quick enough venting to do this?
Honda seemed to suggest they were using regular coil springs if I remember correctly ?
If they would have a shift cam kind of thing, it would be hydraulic. Pneumatic is used for stuff that needs to be compressed, like indeed instead of valve springs.
Regarding point 1 - the rules specify a mechanical pressure regulator with a single set pressure at the pneumatic bottle outlet. To me this sounds like they have to set the pressure for the highest engine speed plus some margin.gruntguru wrote: ↑30 Jun 2019, 04:55I would think pneumatic valve springs would still have benefits on lower speed engines. Two that come to mind are:
1. Spring force variable to suit the rpm - softer at low rpm reduces valve train friction.
2. More aggressive valve acceleration - faster opening and closing permits more area under the lift curve or shorter duration for a given lift x time area.