autogyro wrote:
I have not said that Kers should not be controlled, only not standardized.
Now you're being thick.
'Standardised' depends on what you standardise. It's clear it's too expensive for most teams in its current form. We have virtually standardised engines in F1 already, the sport isn't adverse to standardising anything. You can't have a competition based around a given technology when most teams simply cannot afford it.
If you limit what's able to be developed to what's cost effective and yet makes a difference, then all can compete. It also happens to be the only part of a system relevant to road car use.
You've a massive focus on not standardising anything whilst neatly ignoring that the cost are already unfeasible.
autogyro wrote:
Williams is out in the middle east selling the technology developed from Kers system's into industry as we post. The flywheel system is already in bus and truck production.
And the last time you saw a vehicle produced/developed in the Middle East was when? Which trucks and busses?
No really, go on.
autogyro wrote:
I totally disagree with your over view of Kers and hybrid technology and your comment on the 'pointless hardware development'. Only pointless to you, because you are either unaware of certain projects or you are obviously content with current hardware (why is that?).
I can see you totally disagree, though your Marco Polo attitude - that you're the first person in the world to gain a perspective on how KERS might/might not be useful - is amusing.
I work in the auto industry on relevant projects - I'm well aware of them - and totally disagree with you. So do the major automotive companies I contract to. Technically, there's zero interest in KERS in F1, whether unlimited or not. I asked you to name one automotive project benefiting from F1 KERS from a major auto manufacturer.
Just one. When you're done with the bullsh*t, name me just one. Show us how relevant it is. GM putting the Volt into mass production did far more for advancing hybrid technology than KERS has, and will do so for some time.
I don't think there's much wrong with the current hardware in concept, though it's clearly unaffordable to develop it continually. Given the small energy output and the significant disparities in what competing systems weigh, teams lose more from compromised packaging than they gain in a limited energy boost. That alone - cost issues aside - needs to be addressed.
autogyro wrote:
Any investment in Kers control systems is potentially of huge benefit for control systems in road vehicles, particularly when applied to rapid and high energy charge and discharge rates.
Agreed - you're quoting me now - though allowing competition in control systems only makes for a competitive and much cheaper series. You do not need to build/develop the rest of the system. There's also the small matter that F1 teams do not have the capacity to do so, or to commercialise it - currently they don't.
autogyro wrote:
Also joining a combination motor/generator to an IC crank is a very simple and much limited interpretation of how to harvest and apply energy even under current Kers regulations. What you are referring to is already obsolete.
I'm not referring to any specific method of acquiring redundant energy - there are many outside of the most common approach in F1 - but just how much energy do you think any such solution could actually recover? There's a limit.
Giblet wrote:What do you guys think would be a good solution to band-aid KERS in it's current form to make it viable in the future?
One hardware supplier - unlimited control hardware/software development. You build the black box controlling it, you program it, compete to see who makes best use of it.
FIA to upgrade hardware spec on a yearly/bi-yearly basis.
Fixed price for hardware supply that all can afford.
autogyro wrote:
It is FOTA that is preventing it's use, not the technology or the FIA.
The question has to be why?
You're kidding, right?