To reiterate my main point here, there is a strong suggestion in the proposed Rules changes, and in many students comments here, that E-cars have an "unfair advantage" over the C-cars. This is supposed to be particularly so with the 4WD E-cars in the Acceleration event, and the recent FSUK-14 results might (!?) be used to support this view.
FSUK-14 results:
#. Team ......... O/A ... Acc.
===================
1. Delft(E) .... 856 ... 73
2. Stutt(C) .... 837 ... 38
3. KIT(C) ..... 828 ... 37
4. Zurich(E) . 827 ... 75
5. Monash(C) 821 ... 21
My argument is that if the above C-car teams learn how to do Acceleration properly, then there would be NO E-cars on the podium!
I will spell out how to do this in more detail in a few days, but meanwhile...
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Stever95,
"I.....I......I...... Disagree."
The appropriate saying here is that "Opinions are like a...holes. Everyone has one."
Would you care to support your opinion with some quantifiable reasoning?
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Troy,
"... intuition would suggest that combining lower inertia losses and a higher tractive potential for an equivalent power level would give higher acceleration, all other things being equal, no?"
Your intuition is wrong because your premisses are wrong. Your main mistake above is the second one. I'll give the numbers later.
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Thijs,
"In other words, there must be enough grip off the line to lift your front wheels in the first place.
You basically agreed to that, by saying we should assume a start line acceleration of 2.5g."
Yes, as all the Toothless-Hillbillies know! And the "front-wheels lifting" kind of makes your front-motors redundant, doesn't it? (Except, as noted before, for regen-braking, and also good for very low grip conditions where there is little rear weight transfer.)
"You still haven't told me where you do your tire shopping."
I buy whatever is readily available, but then use it correctly. I note that Delft has some rather special looking Apollos? They look good.
"This is how sticky a drag strip is:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5wQajhGaeI"
And on that sort of drag strip (which is only like that near the start) a Top Fueler takes ~3.8 seconds for ~400m (Edit: STUPID Z!!! See later post). That is an AVERAGE of more that 5.5 Gs, over the full distance! I am asking you to aim for LESS THAN HALF that number, and only for a very brief period at launch (numbers later....).
"I don't remember seeing cars in a circuit race class lifting their front wheels.
...
If you want to make a point about how slow and boring current FSAE car designs are, and how stupid 4WD is, please point out a single race car that can go around corners ..., and that accelerates quicker to 60km/h than the fastest 4WD electric FSAE cars."
You really should get out more. Or use Google?
Last time we had this discussion all the student "experts" were saying that no racecar engine could ever make the 30 kW/sq.cm of restrictor area that I said was a reasonable upper limit. I then had to spend five minutes on Google to find the countless engines that do, in fact, make close to that number, with some claiming quite a bit higher.
You are being LAZY. Please do your own research.
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Daniel,
"Regarding the weight distribution ...
[Premisses ->]
If you only look at acceleration then yes, you want to design a static weight distribution as close to the driven [rear] axle ...
However, there are 4 dynamic events in formula student, where 3 out of 4 require some sort of lateral force creation. ...
With minimal load on the front axle, minimal total lateral force is created needed for cornering. ...
Then you have the issue of balancing the car for these 3 dynamic events. ... slight hickup ... oversteer ...
[Conclusion ->]
So yes, [with 50:50 WD] you take a slight hit on 75 points from acceleration, but you gain a lot more on 50+150+300=500 points."
Try not to take this personally, because the majority of your fellow students also think the same way, but the above reasoning is really STUPID.
Firstly, your "theoretical" reasoning is based on vague, qualitative, hunches. There are NO NUMBERS! If you do your calculations/simulations correctly, with NUMBERS, then you will see how wrong the above reasoning is.
Secondly, you have clearly not done any "empirical" research (ie. checking the "prior art", aka "benchmarking"). If you did, then you would be aware of the countless racecars that have a significant rear weight bias, with larger rear-tyres than fronts, and can BOTH accelerate hard, AND go around corners fast. See below for examples.
Sadly, your sort of reasoning is all too common amongst people who like to call themselves "Engineers" (I have heard it too many times in the past). NO correct use of theory, and NO checking of the empiricism. But worse yet, NO shortage of arrogance along the lines of "I are an Engineer, so I know all about these things. And if I can't do it, then it can't be done!".
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Steven,
"[Maryland car]... as far as lateral force generation goes, if I remember correctly, there weren't many SAE cars faster around a skid pad, or scca autocross.
... transient response and the length required to get the weight distribution could be improved with a custom, short engine/driveline ..."
Yep. It works well, and squashing it all up and making it a bit lighter would work even better...
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Jay,
"Minimal axle loading may create minimal lateral force, but there is less mass to move. See the Deltawing concept."
Again, yes.
Ben Bowlby's DeltaWing concept is driven primarily by the goal of half-mass + half-power = half-fuel-consumption + same-laptimes. To a large degree this is achieved via better aerodynamics. But along with the aero (or as a result of it?) the DW has ~28F:72R weight-distribution (with 75% rear aero), and it goes around corners just fine!
Interestingly, before it ran all the Engineering experts said "IT WILL NEVER WORK!!!". They said this even though the earlier 1980's AAR Eagles that inspired the DW worked really well! Ah, ... experts!
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Bottom line for now, next year's FSUK C-cars should aim to win Acceleration outright, and push the E-cars off the Overall podium. So stop carrying on like sooky little girly-boys and wingeing that the E-cars are not playing fair...
The empirical evidence is out there, and numbers coming soon...
Z