Red Bull RB8 Renault

A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
Crucial_Xtreme
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Owen.C93 wrote:Well it will always go from a high pressure to low pressure otherwise it wouldn't work at all. If you're asking whether the ducts are to manipulate sidepod air flow or whether they are for blowing the diffuser then it's probably just killing two birds with one stone, although I'm sure the feeding of the diffuser offers the better benefit.
I agree completely, definitely killing two birds with one stone. There's so many different things going on with their latest iteration. I'm not surprised it took a while to get it all working, but honestly if you really look at what it's doing, it's typical Newey. Obviously isolating the exhaust plume as much as possible is helping, but I would think the combination of the diffuser interaction of the 2nd duct alongside the 1st duct interacting with radiator cooling is helping more than separating the exhaust. But of course it's all about the entire package and how it all works together and if Valencia is any indicator, it's working well.

McMrocks
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Has allready somebody mentioned how many seconds the double floor brings?

I think it has to be a big improvement if u watch the lap times from Vettel and Hamilton.
http://en.mclarenf-1.com/index.php?page ... 20Hamilton
Vettel was allways around 0.5 sec faster than Hami

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Cuky
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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well, I think that is more to the tires than to the RB's upgrades. I think that if Grosjean was 2nd instead of Hamilton that Vettel wouldn't have that gap he had in Valencia. He would, that is sure, have built a gap, but not that big.

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Kiril Varbanov
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Great illustration from Mario:

Image

Original article here.

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Shakeman
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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McMrocks wrote:Has allready somebody mentioned how many seconds the double floor brings?

I think it has to be a big improvement if u watch the lap times from Vettel and Hamilton.
http://en.mclarenf-1.com/index.php?page ... 20Hamilton
Vettel was allways around 0.5 sec faster than Hami
I don't think there's enough evidence to point to RB's aero upgrades being responsible for the pace. The tyres are so marginal getting the setup exactly right for the circuit and track temp could easily account for the pace of Vettel.

The disparity between Lewis and Jensen shows that even within a team not being able to "switch on" the tyres produces a massive performance gap.

Is the RB back end giving any more performance than the simpler McLaren and Ferrari solutions? Seems very debatable given the performance of Lotus which is always there or there abouts with no such elaborate exhaust.

There must be performance to be had or at least teams believe there is performance to be had by "blowing" the diffuser but is it 0.5 secs a lap performance over a quite similar solution? I haven't seen any credible analysis that can draw that conclusion so far.

Huntresa
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Shakeman wrote:
McMrocks wrote:Has allready somebody mentioned how many seconds the double floor brings?

I think it has to be a big improvement if u watch the lap times from Vettel and Hamilton.
http://en.mclarenf-1.com/index.php?page ... 20Hamilton
Vettel was allways around 0.5 sec faster than Hami
I don't think there's enough evidence to point to RB's aero upgrades being responsible for the pace. The tyres are so marginal getting the setup exactly right for the circuit and track temp could easily account for the pace of Vettel.

The disparity between Lewis and Jensen shows that even within a team not being able to "switch on" the tyres produces a massive performance gap.

Is the RB back end giving any more performance than the simpler McLaren and Ferrari solutions? Seems very debatable given the performance of Lotus which is always there or there abouts with no such elaborate exhaust.

There must be performance to be had or at least teams believe there is performance to be had by "blowing" the diffuser but is it 0.5 secs a lap performance over a quite similar solution? I haven't seen any credible analysis that can draw that conclusion so far.
Isnt Vettels immense pace at the start of the race evidence of him being much quicker then most other on track and not getting the lack of pace after a while like in canada.

beelsebob
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Huntresa wrote:Isnt Vettels immense pace at the start of the race evidence of him being much quicker then most other on track and not getting the lack of pace after a while like in canada.
Not really, Vettel stretched out a lead in Canada too, they'd just got the tyres less well set up there, so it wasn't as much of a lead as quickly. I personally have no doubt that RedBull made a step forward, but I think it's of the order of 0.2-0.3 seconds, not the 1.0 it appeared. I think this, because in Bahrain, under similar track conditions they were about 0.7-0.8 seconds a lap faster than everyone except Renault, so I fully expect that the track conditions lent them about 0.8ish seconds a lap, and the upgrades only 0.2 or so.

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Shakeman
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Huntresa wrote:
Isnt Vettels immense pace at the start of the race evidence of him being much quicker then most other on track and not getting the lack of pace after a while like in canada.
I'm not arguing about the pace of Vettel but whether the pace comes from aero, a better setup on the day or both.

We simply cannot know where the teams are at with tyre knowledge and the progress they've made in optimising the setup to cope with wider temperature variations.

Vettels pace could have absolutely nothing to do with the aero update and be down to a eureka moment with the mechanical setup which we'll have no visible evidence of.

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Shakeman
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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There's footage of the RB sounding "different" in the last race and there's pundits suggesting it's the beginning of another off-throttle blowing arms race again.

Is it blowing or traction control (or neither)?

alogoc
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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i heard a rumor that it's not the off-throttle blowing because RB or Renault has developed a system where driver actually don't let go of the gas pedal in the corner but cylinders are deactivating it self.......!

something like that anyway!
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N12ck
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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alogoc wrote:i heard a rumor that it's not the off-throttle blowing because RB or Renault has developed a system where driver actually don't let go of the gas pedal in the corner but cylinders are deactivating it self.......!

something like that anyway!
so how would the car sense when you have reached a corner if you have your foot flat to the floor?
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beelsebob
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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N12ck wrote:
alogoc wrote:i heard a rumor that it's not the off-throttle blowing because RB or Renault has developed a system where driver actually don't let go of the gas pedal in the corner but cylinders are deactivating it self.......!

something like that anyway!
so how would the car sense when you have reached a corner if you have your foot flat to the floor?
More so, how would this get past the rules that demand that the throttle is under the direct control of a single actuator.

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Cam
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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beelsebob wrote:
N12ck wrote:
alogoc wrote:i heard a rumor that it's not the off-throttle blowing because RB or Renault has developed a system where driver actually don't let go of the gas pedal in the corner but cylinders are deactivating it self.......!

something like that anyway!
so how would the car sense when you have reached a corner if you have your foot flat to the floor?
More so, how would this get past the rules that demand that the throttle is under the direct control of a single actuator.
Could the brake pedal have something to do with it? Like karting, hold the throttle down and balance with the brake. Does the regs say anything about meshing brake activity with throttle activity?
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bhall
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Code: Select all

5.5 Engine torque demand

5.5.1 The only means by which the driver may control the engine torque is via a single chassis mounted foot (accelerator) pedal.

5.5.2 Designs which allow specific points along the accelerator pedal travel range to be identified by the driver or assist him to hold a position are not permitted.

5.5.3 The maximum accelerator pedal travel position must correspond to an engine torque demand equal to or greater than the maximum engine torque at the measured engine speed.

The minimum accelerator pedal travel position must correspond to an engine torque demand equal to or lower than 0Nm.

5.5.4 The accelerator pedal shaping map in the ECU may only be linked to the type of the tyres fitted to the car : one map for use with dry-weather tyres and one map for use with intermediate or wet-weather tyres.

5.5.5 At any given engine speed the driver torque demand map must be monotonically increasing for an increase in accelerator pedal position.

5.5.6 At any given accelerator pedal position and above 5,000rpm, the driver torque demand map must not have a gradient of less than – (minus) 0.030Nm / rpm.

5.6 Engine control

5.6.1 The maximum delay allowed, computed from the respective signals as recorded by the ADR or ECU, between the accelerator pedal position input signal and the corresponding output demand being achieved is 50ms.

5.6.2 Teams may be required to demonstrate the accuracy of the engine configurations used by the ECU.

5.6.3 The maximum throttle target map in the ECU may only be used to avoid throttle target oscillations when the change of torque is small for a change of throttle position. It must not be used to artificially reduce the maximum engine torque.

The selection of the maximum throttle target map will be fixed during qualifying and race.

5.6.4 Engine control must not be influenced by clutch position, movement or operation.

5.6.5 The idle speed control target may not exceed 5,000rpm.

5.6.6 Except when anti-stall or idle speed control are active, ignition base offsets may only be applied above 80% throttle and 15,000rpm and for the sole purpose of reducing cylinder pressure for reliability.

5.6.7 A number of engine protections are available in the ECU.

A minimum of nine seconds hold time should be configured for the engine protections enabled during qualifying and race. 

The configuration of the air tray fire detection and throttle failsafe are exceptionally unrestricted in order to allow each team to achieve the best level of safety.

5.7 Engine high rev limits :

Engine high rev limits may vary for differing conditions provided all are significantly above the peak of the engine torque curve. However, a lower rev limit may be used when :

- The gearbox is in neutral.
- Stall prevention is active.
- The driver clutch request is greater than 95% of the total available travel of the driver clutch actuation device, used only to protect the engine following a driver error.
- An engine protection is active.
- The bite point finder strategy is active.
- The safety car is deployed or during the formation lap.

Except for the above conditions, ignition, fuelling and throttle may not be used to artificially control the engine speed or alter the engine response in a rev range more than 1,000rpm below the final rev limit.

5.2 Other means of propulsion :

5.2.1 The use of any device, other than the 2.4 litre, four stroke engine described in 5.1 above and one KERS, to power the car, is not permitted.

5.2.2 With the exception of one fully charged KERS, the total amount of recoverable energy stored on the car must not exceed 300kJ. Any which may be recovered at a rate greater than 2kW must not exceed 20kJ.

5.2.3 The maximum power, in or out, of any KERS must not exceed 60kW.

Energy released from the KERS may not exceed 400kJ in any one lap.

Measurements will be taken at the connection to the rear wheel drivetrain.

5.2.4 The amount of stored energy in any KERS may not be increased whilst the car is stationary during a race pit stop.

Release of power from any such system must remain under the complete control of the driver at all times the car is on the track.

5.2.5 Cars must be fitted with homologated sensors which provide all necessary signals to the SDR in order to verify the requirements above are being respected.
It looks like there's some room for interpretation within the regulations that govern anti-stall and idle engine speed (5.6.6) as well as those that concern high rev limits (5.7).

Additionally, the regulations define engine control largely in terms of torque demand, a term with at least the potential to invite differing interpretations.

EDIT: Perhaps Red Bull puts the engine in neutral for every braking event and uses KERS harvesting to take the place of engine braking. Although, that would likely contravene the rules on KERS energy storage limits unless excess energy can be discharged by other means.

EDIT: I think everyone should have the regs, which can be found here.
Last edited by bhall on 03 Jul 2012, 10:23, edited 4 times in total.

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Cam
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Re: Red Bull RB8 Renault

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Agreed. Shutting down cylinders may have nothing to do with 'torque' if interpreted another way, the same applies to other switches or controls aside from the accelerator pedal. Very interesting.

Thanks for the regs post bhallg2k.
“There is only one good, knowledge, and one evil, ignorance.”
― Socrates
Ignorance is a state of being uninformed. Ignorant describes a person in the state of being unaware
who deliberately ignores or disregards important information or facts. © all rights reserved.