Chene_Mostert wrote:ME4ME wrote:Chene_Mostert wrote:Ok, so as long as there is a sticker on the K that says "120Kw only" it will clear the rule

Bottom-left of Appendix 3:
Control of Energy Management
-One sensor is connected to measure energy into and out of the MGU-K
Yes, but you fail to see the line from h to k that says "unlimited"
According to the diagram you can only measure 4Mj converted to 120Kw ( electric motors converts supplied electrical power to mechanical power). You can not measure and control "unlimited".
As I said before as long as the 4Mj is deployed at a rate of no more than 120kw the rules are met. Any power derived from the "unlimited" line is a bonus.
ME4ME does not fail anything. This is what I've been saying the whole time: you can generate as much energy as you want, you are still limited to 120KW. Mind the wording too from the rules:
Control of Energy Management
-One sensor is connected to measure energy into and out of the MGU-K
As the mgu-k is also effectively the electric motor, it means the output on the drivetrain gets measured. No matter how much energy you put into the MGU-K from whatever limited or unlimited energy source, it is never allowed to exceed 120kw in output on said drivetrain. The sensor measures this and sends the telemetry data to the FIA.
Any breach on this will result in exclusion from either qualifying or race.
The 4MJ is solely about the maximum output of the battery. You can effectively disable it and perfectly, if the other systems deliver enough, get 120kw.
Chene, I emplore you to reread everything that has been said. Reread the diagram. And please, stop confusing input with output. You are stuck on the idea that the excess energy has no other way then to be translated into power above 120kw. In reality, the car will run the wastegate if too much energy is being generated, which will keep the mgu-h from generating said excess energy. This is necessary to comply with the 120kw limit.
Tommy Cookers wrote:I have tried to make the same point at least twice
in principle it is surely possible for MU-K activity from GU-H activity without there being a point at which there is DC power
the rules do not look credible (as preventing any MU-K action exceeding the nominal 120 kW)
and what about qually ?
there may be some doubt regarding the benefit (of the cost in crankshaft power from such high exhaust recovery power)
That makes atleast a bit more sense. Your standpoint is "aside what is allowed and not allowed, how do you actually prevent the mgu-k from exceeding the 120KW". 3 possibilities:
-You dump it on the battery (ES): only up to 4MJ a lap though.
-You run the wastegate of the turbo, cutting mgu-h energy generation.
-You cut off mgu-k brake energy generation (this will put more stress on the brakes though).