In my opinion, you are not fair about the motors of the MB factory team. They drove 1000 km more than the RB motors and won the championship. Perez was also all the time in the fight with McLaren and Renault, which cannot be said for AT.Marti_EF3 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 11:03That's what I was talking about. Looks good if Honda can keep that reliability with a significant power gain for next year. They don't have to be better, but they have to be there to push the Mercs to a point they can't turn down the PU middle race. Then we will see the real strenght of Honda Vs Merc. Because the Honda PU's have been pushed to the edge, and no terminal failures like the other manufacturers, and no penalties. I think, and it's only my opinion, but the Merc PU package on the works team id always designed to be in clean air, and when it's not the case, it starts overheating... And Honda PU seems to not be bothered with heating issues (Albon usually was on the midfield pack)
Ok put it this way. Racing Point and Williams, the two teams that had several Merc Power Unit failures totaled less distance than both Alpha Tauri and Red Bull (Williams 19km more than RB). They are also fighting in the midfield and more than likely maxxing it for longer._cerber1 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 12:32In my opinion, you are not fair about the motors of the MB factory team. They drove 1000 km more than the RB motors and won the championship. Perez was also all the time in the fight with McLaren and Renault, which cannot be said for AT.Marti_EF3 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 11:03That's what I was talking about. Looks good if Honda can keep that reliability with a significant power gain for next year. They don't have to be better, but they have to be there to push the Mercs to a point they can't turn down the PU middle race. Then we will see the real strenght of Honda Vs Merc. Because the Honda PU's have been pushed to the edge, and no terminal failures like the other manufacturers, and no penalties. I think, and it's only my opinion, but the Merc PU package on the works team id always designed to be in clean air, and when it's not the case, it starts overheating... And Honda PU seems to not be bothered with heating issues (Albon usually was on the midfield pack)
Look at the statistics and think about the operating conditions of the motors.
Honda is the only power unit besides Mercedes to win this year, and did so at the temple of speed. Roughly half of the performance of the car comes from the power unit, perhaps slightly more than half. The rest of the performance comes from the chassis._cerber1 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 12:32In my opinion, you are not fair about the motors of the MB factory team. They drove 1000 km more than the RB motors and won the championship. Perez was also all the time in the fight with McLaren and Renault, which cannot be said for AT.Marti_EF3 wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 11:03That's what I was talking about. Looks good if Honda can keep that reliability with a significant power gain for next year. They don't have to be better, but they have to be there to push the Mercs to a point they can't turn down the PU middle race. Then we will see the real strenght of Honda Vs Merc. Because the Honda PU's have been pushed to the edge, and no terminal failures like the other manufacturers, and no penalties. I think, and it's only my opinion, but the Merc PU package on the works team id always designed to be in clean air, and when it's not the case, it starts overheating... And Honda PU seems to not be bothered with heating issues (Albon usually was on the midfield pack)
Look at the statistics and think about the operating conditions of the motors.
If that was the case Williams would be right up there with the best teams not 2 seconds behind Mercedes.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 15:52
Honda is the only power unit besides Mercedes to win this year, and did so at the temple of speed. Roughly half of the performance of the car comes from the power unit, perhaps slightly more than half. The rest of the performance comes from the chassis.
Why is Williams behind, is it just aero? Or do they have higher cooling requirements as well because their engine covers aren't as efficient increasing drag? If they had more money they'd be able to cut a lot of drag from the car, as the cooling requirements account for roughly 30% of the drag. Also the difference between Williams and Mercedes is ~3%. So if the car has 10% more drag, 10% less aero, and worse suspension kinematics(tire usage), that's your 3% right there.Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 16:51If that was the case Williams would be right up there with the best teams not 2 seconds behind Mercedes.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 15:52
Honda is the only power unit besides Mercedes to win this year, and did so at the temple of speed. Roughly half of the performance of the car comes from the power unit, perhaps slightly more than half. The rest of the performance comes from the chassis.
The laptime difference between best and worst engines is still dwarfed by the difference between the best and worst chassis/aero.
That's exactly why I keep making the point that freezing or even equalizing engine performance will not make racing closer. Williams would still be 2 seconds off factory Mercs and even further behind their closest rivals.
It doesn't matter why they have extra drag, it's not because of the engine.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 17:48Why is Williams behind, is it just aero? Or do they have higher cooling requirements as well because their engine covers aren't as efficient increasing drag? If they had more money they'd be able to cut a lot of drag from the car, as the cooling requirements account for roughly 30% of the drag. Also the difference between Williams and Mercedes is ~3%. So if the car has 10% more drag, 10% less aero, and worse suspension kinematics(tire usage), that's your 3% right there.Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 16:51If that was the case Williams would be right up there with the best teams not 2 seconds behind Mercedes.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 15:52
Honda is the only power unit besides Mercedes to win this year, and did so at the temple of speed. Roughly half of the performance of the car comes from the power unit, perhaps slightly more than half. The rest of the performance comes from the chassis.
The laptime difference between best and worst engines is still dwarfed by the difference between the best and worst chassis/aero.
That's exactly why I keep making the point that freezing or even equalizing engine performance will not make racing closer. Williams would still be 2 seconds off factory Mercs and even further behind their closest rivals.
Look at the Ferrari, the chassis has more drag but is much faster in the corners, and yet it's slower than last year by over a second. The engine has a huge influence in performance, the chassis gained 2% but they lost 4% from the engine. ~40hp.
What about the MGU-K MGU-H ERS heat exchangers? Those are part of the power unit as well. If your chassis doesn't let you have the same heat exchanger layout as the works team, just that alone will hurt you. Because maybe you have to make chassis compromises to accommodate your layout.Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 18:14It doesn't matter why they have extra drag, it's not because of the engine.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 17:48Why is Williams behind, is it just aero? Or do they have higher cooling requirements as well because their engine covers aren't as efficient increasing drag? If they had more money they'd be able to cut a lot of drag from the car, as the cooling requirements account for roughly 30% of the drag. Also the difference between Williams and Mercedes is ~3%. So if the car has 10% more drag, 10% less aero, and worse suspension kinematics(tire usage), that's your 3% right there.Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 16:51
If that was the case Williams would be right up there with the best teams not 2 seconds behind Mercedes.
The laptime difference between best and worst engines is still dwarfed by the difference between the best and worst chassis/aero.
That's exactly why I keep making the point that freezing or even equalizing engine performance will not make racing closer. Williams would still be 2 seconds off factory Mercs and even further behind their closest rivals.
Look at the Ferrari, the chassis has more drag but is much faster in the corners, and yet it's slower than last year by over a second. The engine has a huge influence in performance, the chassis gained 2% but they lost 4% from the engine. ~40hp.
Wherever the drag comes from it is chassis/aero related and will not go away regardless what engine they fit.
Actually Merc is most likely the most efficient engine hence it has the smallest heat rejection.
Same compromises are made by the factory team, RP and from next year McL. None of them seem terribly concerned about packaging PU heat exchangers.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 18:58
What about the MGU-K MGU-H ERS heat exchangers? Those are part of the power unit as well. If your chassis doesn't let you have the same heat exchanger layout as the works team, just that alone will hurt you. Because maybe you have to make chassis compromises to accommodate your layout.
If your fluids are running at 105c, that may be fine for the engine but the MGU-K may be required to have fluids at 70c, so even though the MGU-K cooling requirement is smaller than the engine, it may require more robust cooling to achieve the desired temperatures. Whereas Mercedes can combine MGU-H and turbine cooling on one circuit and reduce packaging, perhaps Williams cannot due to budget.Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 19:55Same compromises are made by the factory team, RP and from next year McL. None of them seem terribly concerned about packaging PU heat exchangers.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 18:58
What about the MGU-K MGU-H ERS heat exchangers? Those are part of the power unit as well. If your chassis doesn't let you have the same heat exchanger layout as the works team, just that alone will hurt you. Because maybe you have to make chassis compromises to accommodate your layout.
Williams have been a Merc customer for quite a few years now, they can't have been surprised by the cooling requirements in these last couple seasons, particularly when said requirements have gone down year on year.
Secondly the ERS side is extremely efficient compared to the ICE. Combined with the fact that the electric motor power is relatively small, the heat rejection of the entire ERS is tiny compared to the charge air cooler+water+oil ICE heat rejection.
To put things into perspective if the total ICE heat rejection to fluids was only 10%, the heat rejection rate would equal the MGUK power.
Mr Shovlin your team's fans don't think in that way"Fundamentally today, we didn't have the best car," said Shovlin after the race.
"We need to look at whether we could have got more out of it, whether it was an issue with where we positioned it in terms of set-up or whether it's something to do with this circuit that's suiting the Red Bull.
"There's a lot there that simply we don't understand right, and that's just going to sit on the job list of things for us to get stuck into over the next week or so.
"We didn't have a difference in car pace, so in a way, it was lost yesterday, which was a close battle, but looking at it today, unless we had a car on pole, I think we would have struggled."
trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin
The cooling package is still part of the chassis/aero. If they can't get it right because of budget limitations no engine will change that.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 20:35
If your fluids are running at 105c, that may be fine for the engine but the MGU-K may be required to have fluids at 70c, so even though the MGU-K cooling requirement is smaller than the engine, it may require more robust cooling to achieve the desired temperatures. Whereas Mercedes can combine MGU-H and turbine cooling on one circuit and reduce packaging, perhaps Williams cannot due to budget.
No, they are doing it to reduce radiator area.
Isn't merc went engineer for teams. At least they send all requirements for engine usage and maintanence and loosing an engine because of cheaper cooling system is more expensive.Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 22:40The cooling package is still part of the chassis/aero. If they can't get it right because of budget limitations no engine will change that.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Dec 2020, 20:35
If your fluids are running at 105c, that may be fine for the engine but the MGU-K may be required to have fluids at 70c, so even though the MGU-K cooling requirement is smaller than the engine, it may require more robust cooling to achieve the desired temperatures. Whereas Mercedes can combine MGU-H and turbine cooling on one circuit and reduce packaging, perhaps Williams cannot due to budget.
To say that Williams are slowest because of very special Merc ERS cooling requirements is plain speculation and clutching at straws.