Exactly. I think maybe even Wazari popped in to say they were banking on the mid-season update being the very large one but then when Covid came in they went conservative and didn't bring the update forward, when they could have. Ish.godlameroso wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 03:17Would they have had enough time to have a more aggressive design ready? To what extent were they banking on introducing an update mid season?
The goal is achieve minimal wear near TDC, where the piston stops moving, load is high and lubrication is now boundary lubrication, and then to achieve hydrodynamic lubrication once the piston starts moving.godlameroso wrote: ↑22 Jan 2021, 04:06What about non DLC coatings? What if the material you are using is very smooth but porous as well leading to flatter profiles but still having good oil retention? Then if you have excellent ring finish and excellent bore finish as well the load is spread out instead of forcing the ring past the peaks. The valleys are good because they retain oil, but it's still a gap in the material. As with most things automotive, it's a tradeoff, more valleys means more oil retention meaning easier to have hydrodynamic film, but less surface area for your rings to spread their load on. But if you have too much "bearing" surface you lower the chance of having a good oil film.
What if your bore material has excellent oil retention properties without the need for valleys, you could start getting the best of both worlds.
Peaks and burnished(folded) metal on cylinder bores are for amateur honers. Rod ratio affects dwell time which will affect how fast the piston moves into and away from TDC. At TDC when the piston reverses direction is when oil film is at its thinnest. Like a water skiier when the boat isn't moving, that's when you depend most on film strength, and oil retention, as well as your additive package because that affects the former 2.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑26 Jan 2021, 19:58The goal is achieve minimal wear near TDC, where the piston stops moving, load is high and lubrication is now boundary lubrication, and then to achieve hydrodynamic lubrication once the piston starts moving.godlameroso wrote: ↑22 Jan 2021, 04:06What about non DLC coatings? What if the material you are using is very smooth but porous as well leading to flatter profiles but still having good oil retention? Then if you have excellent ring finish and excellent bore finish as well the load is spread out instead of forcing the ring past the peaks. The valleys are good because they retain oil, but it's still a gap in the material. As with most things automotive, it's a tradeoff, more valleys means more oil retention meaning easier to have hydrodynamic film, but less surface area for your rings to spread their load on. But if you have too much "bearing" surface you lower the chance of having a good oil film.
What if your bore material has excellent oil retention properties without the need for valleys, you could start getting the best of both worlds.
At near TDC this is where you need the oil retention the most. Since now there is just metal to metal with a mix of oil between the jagged peaks and valleys. If the oil is hiding inside the material... It would just be metal to metal. Not good.
If there is less oil between the two surfaces, the two materials should at least be extremely hard but not recommended to have this for any extended period of time. So having too smooth a surface interface here is detrimental. Sometimes after too much lubrication you can end up with this. A polished bore. Not good. Because oil doesnt stay where you need it, it runs down away from the loaded area and high wear occurs near TDC.
godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Jan 2021, 20:13
Peaks and burnished(folded) metal on cylinder bores are for amateur honers. Rod ratio affects dwell time which will affect how fast the piston moves into and away from TDC. At TDC when the piston reverses direction is when oil film is at its thinnest. Like a water skiier when the boat isn't moving, that's when you depend most on film strength, and oil retention, as well as your additive package because that affects the former 2.
Polishing the bore is only bad because it stops oil retention in conventional cylinder walls(burnished metal aka metal folded over to give a smooth appearance), again material choice has a big impact on the oil retaining capacity. Even with a very smooth surface you can have excellent oil retention. Silicone impregnated aluminum aka nikasil/lokasil/and all the other 'sils' have these properties.
There's a soup of ingredients that can be tweaked to reduce friction in key areas.
If you look at electron microscopy of cylinder bores you can often find burnished or folded metal, it shows up as dark areas on the bore.
The dark areas in this image are burnished/folded metal.
Someone messed up the shape of that crankshaftgodlameroso wrote: ↑26 Jan 2021, 21:00Porus material, often these exotic cylinder liners are hit with what's known as a exposure step. Honed as normal, with first rough pass, second pass then an exposure step where the aluminum layer is scraped off leaving only the silicon or MMC surface which is both very smooth and porous as well. A good honed surface looks like diamonds glittering, or very shiny polished glass. No matter what the bore coating, if that thing sparkles at you in the light, it's a good hone. Valleys love to refract and reflect light.
https://cdn.myonlinestore.eu/945c2349-6 ... e808d3.jpg
I love sound at 0,08 and sound at 2,57.
Always have a margin of safety, Honda built 2020 power unit without realizing the margin of the new materials. Now they not only know, but can work better with it. Imagine if you work out, you get stronger, can lift more, but you don't take advantage of your strength. 2020 was like that, could bench press 90kg easy, probably 120kg is your limit(with stamina in mind), but you stay at 90 pushing to 100. Now 2021 say 130kg is your limit, and you can use it all if you want to.
You are again making some kind of amateurs out of Honda engineers. As if they do not know what they are doing, what they are working with, they act solely on a whim and at random. I am convinced that no one in F1 adheres to these principles of work. It all starts with calculations and analysis, and at the time of the launch of the PU, all its characteristics are known and they only need to be confirmed on the stand and on the track. No one will risk introducing poorly understood materials or technologies, in the hope of being lucky or not. F1 employs top-class engineers with vast knowledge in their fields, and you turn them into tuning enthusiasts.godlameroso wrote: ↑29 Jan 2021, 21:36Always have a margin of safety, Honda built 2020 power unit without realizing the margin of the new materials. Now they not only know, but can work better with it. Imagine if you work out, you get stronger, can lift more, but you don't take advantage of your strength. 2020 was like that, could bench press 90kg easy, probably 120kg is your limit(with stamina in mind), but you stay at 90 pushing to 100. Now 2021 say 130kg is your limit, and you can use it all if you want to.
So with safety margin, let's say 110 would be the baseline number this season.
You're making gods out of humans. No one knows everything, NO ONE. If you think all the engine guys in Honda know everything there is to know, how do you explain the constant development? You don't need to develop anything if you already know it all. You will go directly to the best design you know, with all the confidence that is the best one._cerber1 wrote: ↑30 Jan 2021, 09:48You are again making some kind of amateurs out of Honda engineers. As if they do not know what they are doing, what they are working with, they act solely on a whim and at random. I am convinced that no one in F1 adheres to these principles of work. It all starts with calculations and analysis, and at the time of the launch of the PU, all its characteristics are known and they only need to be confirmed on the stand and on the track. No one will risk introducing poorly understood materials or technologies, in the hope of being lucky or not. F1 employs top-class engineers with vast knowledge in their fields, and you turn them into tuning enthusiasts.godlameroso wrote: ↑29 Jan 2021, 21:36Always have a margin of safety, Honda built 2020 power unit without realizing the margin of the new materials. Now they not only know, but can work better with it. Imagine if you work out, you get stronger, can lift more, but you don't take advantage of your strength. 2020 was like that, could bench press 90kg easy, probably 120kg is your limit(with stamina in mind), but you stay at 90 pushing to 100. Now 2021 say 130kg is your limit, and you can use it all if you want to.
So with safety margin, let's say 110 would be the baseline number this season.