ESPImperium wrote:I have been in discussion, lets say with my Dad for the past, almost 3 or 4 months now about the 2010 fuel tanks. Here comes the question, or lets say questions;
1) Can fuel be lost due to extreme heat, say theres a temprature of 40oC at Bahrain, could fuel be lost like a small puddle disapearing to make a cloud, and could this make an impact of fuel economy over a race distance???
Yes fuel can be lost. However F1 fuel tanks are not an open cavity but are rather a honeycomb like substrate; think of saturating a block of foam with water. Coupled to the fact that the tanks are sealed and can be pressurised, vapor loss is minimised
2) Humidity - Can the humid conditions of say Malaysia hamper fuel economy over a race distance???
Humidity can increase fuel consumption because the partitial pressure of oxygen in the intake charge is reduced due to the presence of H2O. Engine mapping does compensate but it could result in fuel comsumption increase by as much as 2ltrs over a race distance.
3) Hare & Tortoise, will teams choose to come in more regularly to gain extra performance (3 stop) or as i think, keep the current 2 stop or even go one stop for guys futher back than say 8th to 10th on the grid???
Not sure what the rules allows for but I thought the number of stops was mandated
4) How much "extra" will the teams put in as a guest-amate (in laps) to make sure that they can make it over a race distance???
Fuel tank capacity is set at maximum 240ltrs i believe (will check) so that limit opretty much decides what you upper limit is.
Pace, tyre choice (for fuel efficiency vs grip) and aerodynamic set up and gearing will all play a role in fuel economy. Set up strategy is going to through in a lot of variables