Not really, knowing a torque figure tells you very little about the performance of the car.Drica wrote:which are very very important
Not really, knowing a torque figure tells you very little about the performance of the car.Drica wrote:which are very very important
Brian Coat wrote:Thinks: "Please God don't let another round of Torque/Power/Gearing posts start ... "
Cold Fussion wrote:The problem is that the general public has no concept of power, torque and energy ~
Fuel flow limit doesnt increase above 10,500rpm (I believe)WilliamsF1 wrote:How is it there is an increase in rpm without increase in fuel flow?
Sound correct to me.stevesingo wrote:If energy released and therefore torque of the ICE is in proportion to fuel burnt, should we be looking at the fuel flow limits to indicate ICE output? More importantly fuel flow per revolution will indicate torque as this removes the time component of power calculation - Imp power =Tq*rpm/5252
The regulations state Fuel Mass up to 10500rpm= 0.009*rpm+5.5
example 0.009*10500+5.5=100kg
If we calculate the fuel flow limit across the usable rpm range we get
7k___68.5kg/hr
7.5__73
8____77.5
8.5__82
9____86.5
9.5__91
10___95.5
10.5__100
11___100
11.5_100
12___100
If we calculate how much fuel per cycle -
Fuel per Cycle (g)= Fuel Flow ((Kg/hr)/60/(rpm/2))*1000
7k___0.3262g
7.5__0.3244
8____0.3229
8.5__0.3203
9____0.3193
9.5__0.3193
10___0.3183
10.5_0.3175
11___0.3030
11.5_0.2899
12___0.2778
As we can see as rpm rises we get less fuel per cycle.
Assuming that the ICE uses all fuel available at a similar AFR and that friction rises with rpm, the ICE should make more torque lower in the rpm range than at 10500rpm, after which torque will drop significantly.
Thoughts?
Exactly, this is defined in the rules by a formula which increases with rpm till 10.500rpm, after which it is limited to a certain value. This is also shown by the calculation of stevesingo. For this reason the ICE is designed to reach its peak efficiency around 10.500 rpm, because the most fuel per cycle times maximum efficiency results in the highest peak power.Facts Only wrote:Fuel flow limit doesnt increase above 10,500rpm (I believe)WilliamsF1 wrote:How is it there is an increase in rpm without increase in fuel flow?
10500rpm is the point of highest flow, but not the point of highest fuel per cycle. The way the formula works (I don't know why the FiA did this) means the lower the rpm the higher the fuel flow per cycle at a rate of about 1% increase per 1000rpm below 10500rpm.bergie88 wrote:Exactly, this is defined in the rules by a formula which increases with rpm till 10.500rpm, after which it is limited to a certain value. This is also shown by the calculation of stevesingo. For this reason the ICE is designed to reach its peak efficiency around 10.500 rpm, because the most fuel per cycle times maximum efficiency results in the highest peak power.Facts Only wrote:Fuel flow limit doesnt increase above 10,500rpm (I believe)WilliamsF1 wrote:How is it there is an increase in rpm without increase in fuel flow?