(Renault Sport F1)
Renault Sport F1 head into the 2015 Formula One season
powering just two teams. In 2014, the French manufacturer were a supplier to
the Lotus F1 Team, Scuderia Toro Rosso,
Infiniti Red Bull Racing and the
Caterham F1 Team. This season however, they will supply just Infiniti Red Bull
Racing and Toro Rosso as Caterham are attempting to get back on the grid after
entering administration last year while the Lotus F1 Team have switched to
Mercedes Benz power.
Renault endured an extremely difficult start to last season
which begin during the winter testing programme. They had problems firing up
the new 1.6 litre Turbo charged power unit and when did get it started up it would
stop on track.
(Renault Sport F1)
In 2014, the Renault powered Infiniti Red Bull Racing RB10
took three victories with Daniel Ricciardo winning the Canadian, Hungarian and
Belgian Grand Prix. Infiniti Red Bull Racing also finished in second place in
the Constructors championship.
The 2015 season sees a number of big changes in the Renault
power which are explained by Chief Technical Officer Rob White:
What are the challenges going into the second year of the power
units?
Year two of a new engine is always difficult. The 2015 power unit
project was started six months before the 2014 units took to the
track, ie. before we had any significant experience of the technology.
Then we also need to consider the issues arising during the season.
It creates a need to be both forward thinking and reactive.
Splitting resources between projects is a delicate balancing act, in
the short, mid and long term. While certain decisions can be taken
upstream, a number of design decisions were taken quite late in the
day, in order to benefit from the experience of the 2014 power unit.
The result is a power unit that is very different to its predecessor.
What are the principal changes to the Renault Energy F1 for the
2015 season?
We have made some fundamental changes to gain performance
and reliability. We have upgraded every system and subsystem, with
items that will give the most performance prioritized. The principal
changes involve the internal combustion engine, turbocharger and
battery. The ICE will have a new combustion chamber, exhaust system
concept and variable trumpets, as permitted by the 2015 regulations.
The compressor is more efficient, while the energy recovery systems
are able to deal with more severe usage.
The 2014 unit was already well placed in its centre of gravity, however
we have tidied up the packaging to give greater ease of integration
into the chassis. Additionally many systems and functions have been
rationalized and simplified to further ease the task. In short, there are
very few carry over pieces between the 2014 and 2015 power units.
This year the power unit is broken down into ‘tokens’. How does
this system work?
This year there are regulatory limits to do with ‘token’ spend that
determine the number of changes we can make. The power unit is
divided into sections and then subassemblies associated to it. The
total number of tokens within the power unit is equal to 66. Five out
of the 66 tokens are not available for change as they are frozen.
An
engine manufacturer is able to select 32 token areas, or 48% of the
engine, which he would like to change. As the technology gets more
mature next year and beyond there will be fewer and fewer tokens
available to spend. Clearly the juggling act we need to perform is
which areas of the power unit are the most worthwhile to attack for
performance reasons.
How has Renault decided to allocate its tokens?
We have used the majority of the tokens for the first race and our use
of tokens during the course of the season will be relatively modest.
It then becomes a matter of strategy about when you introduce the
remaining tokens; whether to introduce at the start of the season
when the technology is relatively immature but could give greater
relative performance, or later in the season when the part has had
more testing miles but the impact on performance will be potentially
less. We can still make changes for reliability under the sporting
regulations. We have therefore prioritized token spend to make as
much headway as possible with performance.
What are your aims for 2015?
First and foremost we need to run reliably, be quick and closer to front.
Our honest expectation is that we will make a decent improvement
but it is difficult to quantify the gain relative to our competitors who
will also progress. What we can say is that we are on course to make
a significant performance step and resolve the principal reliability
weaknesses by the time we get to the first race.
(Renault Sport F1)
© Ben Johnston 2015
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