j.yank wrote:Andres125sx wrote:
Comparing laptimes to work out some power numbers is flawed for a simple reason, this PUs do not provide same power constantly, it depend on the energy harvested, so an improvement in energy harvesting that allows using full power (ICE + ERS) longer will improve laptimes even if peak power is exactly the same.
Simulators like OptimuLap do not relay on the maximum power applied constantly during the entire lap. They are using the value of the maximum power as available power that is modified in each corner and straight of the circuit, depending of their specific characteristics. Yes, we do not know the exact moment when energy from MGU-H is applied and when from MGU-K but
we know the aggregate sum per lap that put the ultimate limit over the available energy. This available energy is much, much more important than the peak power. This depends on the accuracy of the simulation software how this available energy will be distributed over the lap. Yes, the parameters of the chassis have huge impact but if you put uniform parameters for all cars except their power you can get at least oriented what is the weight of one or another parameter - in our case which one of the MGUs contributes more for the lap time deficiencies of McLaren. Don't try to be very precise, but don't ignore the general balances of the process.
How do you know the bolded part? You simply can´t, available energy is the main difference between Mercedes and Honda, Mercedes is able to harverst from mgu-h much much longer than Honda, so they can apply mgy-k much longer than Honda. What I mean is this is not a fixed parameter or constant, it is very different from team to team so you can´t know it
Since you can´t know how much available energy each car has, you can´t know how do they distribute them, so you don´t know what power they´re using in each straight and for how long, let alone doing any estimation about total peak power
j.yank wrote:Comparing the times from last year and this year on several circuits for different teams you can't find another explanation than Mercedes and Ferrari are running now in the range from 850 to 910 hp (with ERS).
Basically there´re too many unknowns (available energy during a lap, how it is distributed, real power of ICE...), you can do some assumption to get some results, but it will be strongly dependant on your assumption, so it will be more of an estimation than a real calculation.
That´s the reason I replied, your post states "you can´t find another explanation than they´re running now in the range from 850 to 910 hp", and I cannot agree with that since you´re doing assumptions to get those numbers, so if you change your assumptions (how much energy they have available for a lap AND how do they distribute it) your results would change a good ammount, so yes, I can´t find more explanations than that. For example they´re harvesting more energy than past season and/or more than you´re assuming.