WhiteBlue wrote:ringo wrote:According to GP Week the teams have agreed to adopt 1.6 litre, 4 cylinder turbo engines, limited to 10,000 rpm and producing approximately 650bhp. The new engines will be mated to kinetic energy recovery systems, capable of producing a further 150bhp power boost. A fuel flow rate limit will also be introduced to ensure the engines are frugal compared to the current crop of 2.4 litre V8s.
http://en.espnf1.com/f1/motorsport/story/27521.html, it's old news. But only 10,000rpm! that's too low!
Why would 10,000 rpm be too low? Power is build by rpm times torque.
I believe that 10,000 rpm will be pretty much the limit that would be sensible for a formula that has both power and drivability. An over revving engine is nothing adorable if it has no torque to speak of.
Excessive engine rpm is not beneficial for a formula that has twice the torque potential of the old formula. The new formula has 1.6L of displacement times three for the boost pressure (3 bar). Three times 1.6L is 4.8L. That is the torque potential of the new formula. And 4.8 L is twice the displacement of the the old 2.4L formula. So lowering the rpms from 18,000 to 10,000 is still under proportional and will result to pretty much the same or higher power of the old formula with much better drivability.
Now it is your turn to explain to me why this makes no sense in your world.
It's not that it doesn't make sense. It's just not impressive really.
There's not much challenge in building that engine. Existing engine designs in production cars will easily meet a 650hp mark if turbo charged for racing. The car companies probably have decades of advanced development on their little engine sub 2.0lt designs than an F1 team can develope in 2 years.
Look on any tuner forum and you'll see 1.6lt turbo cars making this range of power at these engine speeds.
10,000rpm can guarantee an engine can last a season, it's too easy. Development cost should be more like 1 million euros.
If you have the money, you can build a turbo 1.6 revving to 10k rpm with off the shelf parts right now, mark you the parts wont be as light or the head wont flow as well, but you can easily build an engine with similar power and torque to what is being proposed here.
Direct injection is also a non issue now. The technology doesn't even have to be developed further to be applied to such low engine speeds.
You know what, I'll put in a bid as an engine supplier for 2013. I can start building my 1.6l turbo 10,000 rpm toyota corrola engines from now!
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