2026 Hybrid Powerunits

All that has to do with the power train, gearbox, clutch, fuels and lubricants, etc. Generally the mechanical side of Formula One.
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diffuser
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Joined: 07 Sep 2012, 13:55
Location: Montreal

Re: 2026 Hybrid Powerunits

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wuzak wrote:
06 Jul 2026, 19:09
A lot of extra friction and inertia for how much benefit?

Also, the crankshaft is a 3 pin, 120° crankshaft by the rules. How well does that work with running a 4 cylinder?


4 cylinder running a 4/6 of maximum fuel flow = 2,100MJ/h, which is 6,802rpm per fuel flow regulations.
4 cylinders running at 550MJ/h = 2,200MJ/h, which is 7,155rpm per fuel flow regulations.
Yeah turning 2 cylinders completely off and carrying the dead weight of those cylinders doesn't make sense to me. I could forsee a scenario where decreasing feul pressure in 2 or 3 cylinders loses less HP than using that xtra pressure in the remaining cylinders gains.

chipengineer
chipengineer
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Joined: 24 Sep 2025, 05:48

Re: 2026 Hybrid Powerunits

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AR3-GP wrote:
12 Jul 2026, 17:28
chipengineer wrote:
12 Jul 2026, 16:49
Electric CVTs are more reliable than any other transmission type.
They are being adopted in the US and Japan. Almost all Toyotas use them.
Yes but they can only be used with hybrids.
A battery is not required for an eCVT to work. It just needs to send power from one MG to another MG to perform the transmission function.
The battery just allows regen braking and more power for acceleration.