ringo wrote: ↑23 Sep 2017, 18:35
Wazari wrote: ↑23 Sep 2017, 18:05
ringo wrote: ↑22 Sep 2017, 16:48
I think the rules changes don't point to what is being done. The new rules are being proactive in preventing such things from being done.
I think oil burning is a non-story; just a distraction from the real performance differentiators; the combustion, MGUH and deployment scheduling.
This is a reactionary move by the FIA not a proactive one. There is definitely a significant role with lubricants that some manufacturers are using in the combustion process, not just in qualifying but at all times.
From James Allen F1. Not disagreeing with you but showing that it's not responsible for the huge power gaps that we think are possible.
https://www.jamesallenonf1.com/2017/09/ ... eers-view/
A good article and one that everyone here should read!
When talking here some people seem to forget that engines will always use a certain amount of oil. Especially F1 engines where they keep the piston ring pressure on the low side to reduce friction. Some of that oil has always found its way into the combustion chamber and the result is burning oil.
Are they taking advantage of that in these engines? No doubt they are - tweaking the recipe to make it more combustion friendly.
But - the oils primary job is lubrication, not fuel.
Anyone that thinks burning the oil in qualifying is what gives Mercedes their Q3 power mode does not understand how complex these power units are. The article posted gives some insight into this but there is far more to it than that.
Wait and see the performance of the Mercedes cars next year. If all of this oil burning is to be believed they will lose power / performance in 2018