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Thread: WRC future
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31st January 2021, 17:55 #1171Senior Member
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I agree with Mirek in his previous post, the small amount of experience I have had with Lithium batteries, is just what he said, unpredictable and uncontrollable once they go.
Obviously F1 & WEC have been using them for years, and I must admit that I am surprised that I don’t think I have seen a full battery meltdown/failure, although I may be mistaken there despite some massive accidents. But as he says, the remoteness and possibility for fire spread in WRC makes the consequences of that happening, potentially far greater.
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31st January 2021, 20:31 #1172Senior Member
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another fact: if there's no statistic for claiming a thing, there's the same no statistic to claim the opposite. older way sometime is not the best way, despite our habits. so let's wait for the statistic before take a part. i get there's a strong bias going on, but time will tell.
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31st January 2021, 20:36 #1173Senior Member
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paddon stated that they come up with a device that flood and destroy batteries in case of a fire menace: "The batteries you are now seeing in Motorsport cars like ours have a flooding system, so worse case scenario we pump water into the battery which destroys the battery, but saves the car."
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31st January 2021, 21:23 #1174Senior Member
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We do have some recent statistics of WRC cars burning out completely at WRC ralies, only those that I rememeber immediately- Lappi Fiesta Mexico 2020, Breen C3 Turkey 2018, Paddon/Tanak Portugal 2016?
(In neither of these the crew or other with extinguishers managed to stop the fire)
That's only completely burned out, parts or vegetation catching fire from hot exhaust is relatively common, though usually put out.
There was off course the large number of Polos (and Fabias) burned, even though that was a fuel tank design issue.
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31st January 2021, 21:38 #1175
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1st February 2021, 01:27 #1176Senior Member
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1st February 2021, 01:30 #1177Senior Member
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1st February 2021, 07:10 #1178Senior Member
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Yeah they do use Lithium.
In WEC initially Toyota used supercapcitors, and Audi a flywheel energy store, but both moved to lithium to compete with the Porsche which was lithium from the off.
Technically I don’t know why their initial solutions weren’t as good as lithium batteries, but I do know Porsche was able to reach the 8MJ sub class straight away, while the others could not.
F1 is definitely lithium as it’s controlled in the rules.
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1st February 2021, 14:47 #1179Senior Member
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Amongst Mikkelsen's interview with Dirtfish: “I think we know there are not likely to be any new manufacturers coming in for 2022".
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1st February 2021, 20:50 #1180Senior Member
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Can somebody with a YT account drop a comment to Jon, poor chap is confused and spreading fake news https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQKdoIA8yPI a) M-Sport did not rule out building a 2027 car,...
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