Try our new info resource - "Aladdin's Cave" (Main menu)Just added a separate link to Ash's Dropbox thread (shortcut)
My understanding is that F1 engines are made to such tight tolerances that they have to pump hot water through the cooling system to warm the engine before starting. Once some expansion has taken place it's safe to start them. Amazing and beautiful engineering but not very practical on a daily basis.
Unfortunately if you burn hydrogen in the presence of nitrogen (our atmosphere is 78% nitrogen) it produces nitrous oxides.It is much cleaner than burning hydrocarbons though.If you react hydrogen in a fuel cell there is just water as a byproduct and you generate electricity.
Quote from: Multiman on July 07, 2023, 06:50:11 PMMy understanding is that F1 engines are made to such tight tolerances that they have to pump hot water through the cooling system to warm the engine before starting. Once some expansion has taken place it's safe to start them. Amazing and beautiful engineering but not very practical on a daily basis.Likely that's the reality, but unlikely it's derived from the efficiency angle.They have 266cc cylinders, run on restricted fuel specification, boosted at 50 psi, have maximum fuel flow limits, no increase in fuel allowed over 10500 rpm, make roughly 840 bhp (without electric addition) have to last minimum number of races, try to give that output throughout their service life without significant drop.The focus is ultimately performance, efficiency stated is just a byproduct and not the reasoning for such tight tolerance.