30/10/2013
NEWS STORY
From 1906 through to 2006, Grand Prix engine speeds rose ever higher, from less than 2000 rpm to ultimately a mind-boggling 20,000 rpm, writes Ian Bamsey, in Race Engine Technology magazine. Then the rule-makers abruptly halted the march of progress with a 19,000 rpm rev limit for 2007, subsequently reduced to the current stifling 18,000 rpm - plus, to add insult to injury, a moratorium on development.
While engine evolution is back in 2014, the emphasis henceforth will be fuel efficiency rather than outright, untrammelled performance. The glorious Century of Speed is over.
The first Formula One engine to attain 20,000 rpm on track was the Cosworth CA of 2006, and it is generally agreed that no rival surpassed it as the benchmark before rev limiting was cruelly imposed.
These days the naturally aspirated 2.4 litre V8 CA lives on, powering Marussia in its ight with the Renault-engined Caterhams for the honour of top 'newbie'.
Operating speed and horsepower steadily climbed during much of the 3.0 litre V10 era preceding the switch to V8s mandated for 2006. It is widely agreed that BMW reached 19,000 rpm first, in 2002. However, engine mileage requirements were lengthened in 2004 and 2005, which had the effect of pegging the ongoing crankshaft speed rise. Representative of the top 2005 V10s was the Toyota that ran to a maximum of 19,200 rpm and produced an estimated 930 bhp mid-season. All of the 2005 V10s exceeded 900 bhp but it is not thought that any exceeded 950 bhp, with the possible exception of the Honda at the end of the season.
Cosworth's 2005 V10 had its red line at 19,000 rpm. Indeed, it had taken a relatively long time for the Northampton company to rise above 18,000 rpm with its V10s. Nevertheless, with the CA it took the uncompromising approach of targeting 20,000 rpm from the outset. This was the first time it had produced such a high-speed V8 – the previous fastest running of the type had been its XF IndyCar engine, which ran to 16,250 in qualifying back in 2002 (immediately before the switch to a Cosworth-supplied spec engine for the CART series).
By regulation, the CA retained the per-cylinder displacement of the existing 3.0 litre TJ V10, which had a 95 mm bore. As Cosworth's technical director Bruce Wood remarks, "To go faster you just have to keep making the bore bigger, the stroke shorter and sort out your valves..."
Of course, that is easier said than done and RET's exclusive article on the CA explains in great detail, all the factors involved in the design and development of the 20,000 rpm version of 2006 and the subsequent 'frozen engine formula' derivative still in use this season. For example, running an engine faster increases friction, potentially to an extent that counteracts the sought after horsepower gain. Means Cosworth developed to counter this drawback even included applying a Diamond-Like Carbon (DLC) coating to the piston skirts.
At 20,000 rpm the CA's maximum piston acceleration was 10,616 g while the load imparted on each crankpin by the associated piston and con rod reached a very substantial 5937 kg at that unprecedented speed. To put that into context, an anti-ballistic missile attains a g-force of only 100 g while 5937 kg is approximately two and a half times the weight of a Rolls Royce Wraith!
Race Engine Technology's full report of the Cosworth CA, which spans 26 pages and is a must-read for all involved with racing technology, can be bought from highpowermedia.com