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19 Jul 2023, 12:05 (Ref:4169041) | #4176 | ||||
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I’m not going to reply to every quote, but rather focus on the bigger meaning.
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I indeed see two things: 1 People not happy with the exact power split of the 2026 regulation. 2 People questioning the desirability of such a high electric component in the first place (with all the weight implications that brings), considering that with synthetic fuel you car runs net zero if it’s produced sustainably. So how there is only a very thin line between these two arguments. Also imagine how easy it is for someone who doesn’t like the 2026 regulation, to muddy the waters now long before even 2026 so some people will start to put one and one together and think: “Is this whole 2026 powerunit thing a good idea in the first place?”. Quote:
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19 Jul 2023, 14:31 (Ref:4169071) | #4177 | |||
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agreed tho that this sounds more likely to be the direction post 2030. |
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19 Jul 2023, 14:59 (Ref:4169079) | #4178 | ||||
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But... the commercial holders want manufactures. At a high level two things had to happen to rope them in. (1) The power units needed to be cheaper to develop and more likely to have performance parity and (2) they wanted them to be more sustainable/align with their product roadmaps. As to the first, the spec is simpler by removing the MGUH, more design constraints, more spec components, etc. And they also fixed development costs by putting in place power unit development cost caps. As to the second, they knew it needed to be fully sustainable and to have a larger electric component that mirrors (at least superficially) what they are marketing to the public. So this resulted in an increase on the electric side, but not going fully electrics, because otherwise F1 would just be replicating Formula E. This was going to result in a general continuation of the current base technical solution. And by extension the bulk and weight of those same solutions. Which then drives the overall weight, bulk, size of the cars. Unless FOM/Liberty was to change course on continuing and/or increased manufacture involvement there is really no other alternative given those constraints because all of that came out of direct negotiations with the various parties. As I have talked about in a number of posts in this thread is that what you are posting about is... what happens next. But not immediately "next", but after the 2026 regulations have run their course, because 2026 regulations are off and running. Pandora's box is open. What happens when the world maybe has moved beyond the need to focus on combustion/electric hybrids. That might free up F1 to move away from that direction and pull back toward some of the ideas you call out. But is that going to drive significant change for the 2026 regulations? IMHO absolutely not. They WILL try to achieve their goals of reducing weight. While the chassis spec is still being defined, it can be adjusted, but it can only move so much. But all of that talk about technical direction (non-hybrid combustion engines, lighter cars, etc.) is ancillary to keeping the existing and in particular new manufactures happy and also to ensure the sport is entertaining. There is a concept (cynical joke in some ways) called "Safety is third" that came about in the US and I don't know if it has really had global reach or not and if anyone is familiar with the idea or not. It can be defined in many ways. But I think part of the genesis is that companies will say things like "Safety is first here at Acme manufacturing!" when we know the top priority is really things like "maximizing shareholder value". So we can pretend that things like lightweight cars, NA V8/V10 power units and no hybrid solutions are the priority one and will drive the future, but they are not. Richard |
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19 Jul 2023, 23:38 (Ref:4169125) | #4179 | ||
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Eye candy: 296 GTS engine, Ferrari F 163 BC It was bad enough when Ferrari insisted on running a flat-12 with no space for venturis, hence the swift switch to the 1.5L narrow-angle V6 turbo. On the other hand, the hybrid system is probably more complicated than the F1 car with the front axle recovery and deployment. So you suppose the LMH and LMDh approach of "use any engine you want and we'll use BOP to make the cars evenish" is the one to go for? The Cadillac has a 5.5L road car based engine. The Acura has the abandoned 2.4L Indycar engine. The BMW has the old DTM V8 with turbos added. The Porsche has the old V8 from the RS Sypder LMP2 with turbos added. It's true that the faster cars are mostly twin-turbo V6s, but there is quite a variety. Such a "run whatever racing or road engine you brung and we'll adjust" rule would be quite the departure for Formula 1 whose cars have traditionally been built to a "Formula" -- be it 2500cc, 1500cc, 3000cc or 1500cc supercharged, 3500cc, 3000cc, 3000cc V10 only, 2400cc V8 only etc. Last edited by V8 Fireworks; 19 Jul 2023 at 23:56. |
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20 Jul 2023, 07:02 (Ref:4169145) | #4180 | |
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They need to keep things simple. Hybrids are very complicated pieces of kit and there's no reason why they shouldn't go back to simple power units. F1 doesn't need to be road relevant after all.
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20 Jul 2023, 09:52 (Ref:4169153) | #4181 | ||
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I'd much rather F1 teams be given an off the shelf road going EV unit and then allow them to modify it to make it more reliable/powerful, but give it a weight limit of say 50kg. That would be true road relevance. It would be cost effective, allow teams to still brand them as "hybrids" so the PR people are happy, but probably provide minimal actual power so then if you spend millions developing it you don't actually gain that much performance.
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21 Jul 2023, 13:10 (Ref:4169296) | #4182 | |||||||||
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Normally if you try to sell a product, you will say it is the best things since sliced bread until you launch the next product. In this case they are saying our product will be crap 3 years before it will see the light of day! To me that is a very strange PR strategy. Quote:
I could see this remote possibility: F1/the FIA approach the manufacturers and say, look we hooked you up with the current 2026 power unit regulations. However we don’t think it is in the our collective best interest any more to keep pursuing this direction. We need to get these cars lighter and (as you rightfully point out) with the current 2026 proposal that is not possible (basically weight wise they replaced one weight dog, the MGU-H approach, with another; the battery). The alternative option could be to postpone the regulation change one year and not throw the engine design work completely down the drain, but reuse it in a different configuration. Add KERS and market it as hybrid, the sustainable fuel can provide all the greenwashing they want, but at the same time you can slice more than 100kg of the final weight if you take inboard smaller cars and wheels. The manufacturers can still get what they want, but in the meantime the FIA, F1, independent teams, racers and fans get what they want as well, cheaper, smaller and lighter cars. Quote:
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Manufacturers like Porsche and Ferrari longer term want to maintain their identity by the use of synthetic fuel rather than electric only. Therefore for them for F1 to run on synthetic fuel is way more important and even desirable than for it to run extremely high electric components. I’m not arguing for cars like decades ago, nor are the FIA and F1. The argument is for lighter cars and sustainable fuel allows for it. That is an argument that only the last years/months has started gaining momentum. Quote:
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P.S. I hope you don’t shoot me too hard if I won’t keep this discussion going. We have said what we’ve said, we agree and disagree, but my spare time is limited. |
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21 Jul 2023, 14:01 (Ref:4169305) | #4183 | ||||
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When you say that hybrids will be in niche markets "soon". The question really is "exactly when is soon?" I think based upon your posts that you think it is closer to 2026 and for me maybe it is closer to 2030+ (Note: 2030 is arbitrary ending point for the future 2026 regulations, those probably will run longer than four years). I broadly agree with you on it eventually being a niche solution, but just disagree on timing and by extension the purpose behind some of the comments you mention by F1 and others. As I interpret those same comments different, I tend to think they agree with my position (later) and not yours (sooner). I think we talk as if 2026 and even 2030+ are a long time away. But in some ways they are not that far away. I don't feel FIA/F1 talking about "what is next" now as being overly critical as to what is planned for 2026. I don't know when they will settle on the 2026 technical regulations (chassis/aero regulations) to match up with the 2026 power unit regulations, but it probably is relatively soon. No doubt there remains items to work out and that is rooted of the current rumbling (such as from RBR). But in the end, just like teams have to develop cars for next year in the current season, its normal to have talk about the next set of technical regulations as this set is wrapping up. Anyhow, I enjoy the discussion and apologize if I am overly critical in my responses. It is just me being passionate about my opinions. Richard |
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21 Jul 2023, 23:53 (Ref:4169357) | #4184 | ||
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The idea is exactly for it to be battle ground of hybrid development. |
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22 Jul 2023, 03:25 (Ref:4169368) | #4185 | |
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Exactly! There are significant controls over development (cost, equipment, etc.). Combustion portion is highly prescribed with some design flexibility on the top end of the engine. The differentiator is likely to be on the electric side.
Richard |
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22 Jul 2023, 09:34 (Ref:4169394) | #4186 | ||
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22 Jul 2023, 12:36 (Ref:4169411) | #4187 | ||
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Of course! That's what Mercedes, Renault etc want (for some reason).
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But if not for the convoluted 2014 regulations, would we have technically marvellous engines with 18:1 compression, 30:1 air fuel ratio and ~50% thermal efficiency? Using pre-chamber turbulent jet injection and clever engineering to survive on such lean mixtures (and ultra high compression with 70 psi turbo boost on top) that would make lesser engines explode in short order? Probably not. Then all the fancy MGU-H and MGU-K strategies on top of that too (albeit MGU-H soon being removed to "simplify" the 2026 units). (Do fans care and just want inefficient V10s or V12s anyway...? Hmm...) Last edited by V8 Fireworks; 22 Jul 2023 at 12:43. |
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7 Sep 2023, 09:12 (Ref:4175500) | #4188 | ||
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Drivers after Monza once again saying that the cars are almost as bad as the 2021 cars now in terms of being able to follow one another closely.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/f...vers/10516681/ |
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4 Oct 2023, 13:00 (Ref:4179613) | #4189 | |
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https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/...abtrieb-motor/
AMS is indicating that the new power unit regulation add another 36kg on top of what we got when the hybrids were introduced and all the incremental weight gains we have gotten since then. Yet, due to the smaller cars and narrower wheels and tyres they still think they can reduce it 20kg. 798kg - 20 makes 778kg. Now imagine, what we could've ended up with if they had just chosen simple V6 turbo's with KERS (to call it hybrid) running on synthetic fuel. 778kg - 36kg mentioned in the article makes: 742kg (for the current PU). 742kg - 35kg makes: 707kg (MGU-H with larger battery and electronics). 707kg - 17kg makes 690kg (not only narrower tyres but also smaller diameter tyres and wheels). 690kg! With all the current safety standards and cost restrictions! Oh well. |
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4 Oct 2023, 13:12 (Ref:4179619) | #4190 | ||
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And while no doubt the PU could be even more simpler, I think it is supposed to be pretty simple in this 2026 spec. V6, turbo, kinetic recovery and synthetic fuel. Maybe the delta is that the 2026 spec will rely upon battery power/electric power more than the current spec (hence, larger battery packs). Richard |
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4 Oct 2023, 14:52 (Ref:4179639) | #4191 | ||
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5 Oct 2023, 00:26 (Ref:4179697) | #4192 | ||
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Sorry, not been following. When you say 50% electric component, what does the 50% refer to?
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5 Oct 2023, 01:55 (Ref:4179711) | #4193 | ||
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https://www.crash.net/f1/news/1037265/1/f1-2026-rule-details-emerge-smaller-cars-40-cent-less-downforce |
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5 Oct 2023, 02:29 (Ref:4179716) | #4194 | ||
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Thanks.
50% will be recovered EV and the recovery won’t have MGU-H. Impressive. For only 36kg more. although I don’t see the 36kg in the article, is that net after the other changes or just the increased battery? Sounds like they are making the cars narrower and shorter too. Again impressive if they can do that. And they run with less fuel. |
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6 Oct 2023, 12:05 (Ref:4179977) | #4195 | ||
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The article mentions the power train will be 193kg or 23% more. That works out to +36kg. I take it as the net regarding the power train with an overall realistic goal of -20kg mentioned. But there is a school that wants to go lighter and then more drastic changes are needed. I see where you coming from when you say only +36kg is impressive. However it is 36kg on top of an already very heavy power train for open wheel racing which has let to far to heavy cars even today. |
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6 Oct 2023, 19:07 (Ref:4180048) | #4196 | ||
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I am aware of the whole too heavy, add lightness stuff. I get it.
Here, I was just commenting on the technical aspect that I thought it quite clever. Richard added a bit more in another thread as I’m sure you’ve seen. https://tentenths.com/forum/showpost...&postcount=208 |
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7 Oct 2023, 07:16 (Ref:4180124) | #4197 | |||
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Thanks for pointing to that video that is quite interesting. So the I was also mistaken thinking that the battery was going to get larger. But then the 36kg extra is a bit more puzzling. So despite loosing the MGU-H and maintaining the same battery size, Auto-motor-and-spurt is claiming the power train is still gaining 36kg. That MGU-K and the electric hardware along with it must really be gaining a lot of weight. |
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7 Oct 2023, 11:44 (Ref:4180148) | #4198 | ||
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They should just set the min weight at 700kg and let the teams do a race to make the cars as light as possible. In that situation I wonder how many teams would just ditch off the Hybrid stuff or elements of it…?
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7 Oct 2023, 15:04 (Ref:4180179) | #4199 | |||
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There is one other change to the 2026 spec that I wonder if if might have weight increase consequences. For safety purposes.... Quote:
I don't know if that change to the MGU-K and related electronics location is weight neutral, but I suspect it may result in a weight increase as it is moved and encapsulated. Richard |
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7 Oct 2023, 15:07 (Ref:4180180) | #4200 | ||
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Richard |
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