
Dry Ice and brake dust during Pitstops
#1
Posted 27 January 2000 - 19:34
The second was the occurence of a cload of brake dust when the tyres were removed. What was that dust? Was it blown off using a fan? Why don't I see it anymore?
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#2
Posted 28 January 2000 - 04:02
#3
Posted 28 January 2000 - 19:12
#4
Posted 28 January 2000 - 23:27
Dry ice is still put INTO the sidepods before the race, but I always thoughht it was questionable to put it in during a pitstop: the benefits are not that clear, and it is something more to mess up/take more time...
#5
Posted 29 January 2000 - 01:51
#6
Posted 29 January 2000 - 16:35
The wheel change guns are pneumatic tools and it is their exhaust which blows the dust around.
Highly toxic? I would be a little suprised - althought virtually all dust is not a particularly good thing for you in large quantities.
For toxic concerns the fuels have been/are a worry. Even at club level motorsports (in Australia at least) some people run fuels that make your eyes and nose run but give you a dry throat - magical stuff

Perhaps Joe Jackson is right "everything gives you cancer"
#7
Posted 30 January 2000 - 05:02
And as for the carbon fibre brakes, they indeed do destroy the whole assembly during a practice session or a race. Wear the whole lot away - well wear away to the point that it's impractical to think about going out again with them. Likewise, I don't think that they would be terribly toxic, but you never know what things will do to your lungs.
#8
Posted 31 January 2000 - 17:25
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Ursus
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#9
Posted 31 January 2000 - 17:36
#10
Posted 31 January 2000 - 23:31
Its the millenium baby

#11
Posted 01 February 2000 - 03:46
#12
Posted 08 February 2000 - 01:35
#13
Posted 08 February 2000 - 22:04
#14
Posted 09 February 2000 - 17:10
I think Nitrogen would be very good. But that mixture is what Nitrous Oxide bascially is. So I think they would have to use water.
#15
Posted 09 February 2000 - 19:31
"Dry ice" is usually solidified CO2 which sublimates (can't resist the word) from solid to gas soaking up HEAPS of heat from the atmosphere leaving the surroundings cooler but also soaked in gaseous CO2. This means that there would be less O2 for the engine to breath and less HP. Any of the liquified or solidified gases would I think cause this displacement effect. If you sidestepped it with some O2 rich substance I think it would get banned

Nitrous oxide (or chemical supercharging) carries extra O into the cylinder (either as a liquid or as an O rich gas) allowing additional fuel and combustion. It can also have a charge cooling effect, allowing greater O2 density and more HP
Water injection operates on a slightly different principal. The O in H2O is not used in the combustion (its already combusted with the H) but rather acts as a heat sink reducing peak in cylinder temps. This is a power loss (!) that occurs but then allows the engine to be further tuned, spark, compression, or boost which more than makes up for the loss.
It may be (I am a not totally convinced on this one yet) that you can also more than make up for the inlet air flow loss, the displacement of air in cylinder, and the heat loss of the water out the exhaust by the increase in air density gained by the cooling effect of water sprays. It would seem that better intercooling is a better solution. Subaru/STi/Prodrive have used external intercooler sprays for getting but heat rejection.
Ferrari were using water injection with some success in the turbo era and there was at least one attempt to have it banned as a "power adding addative" but Ferrari successfully argued that the H2O is not power adding as it actual takes heat out of the cycle in exiting the cylinder as heated gas. Good for them!
And on board fire extinguishers could be used similarly (to Subarus water sprays) for super efficient intercooler performance - in qualifying perhaps. Not my idea but it worked - then it was banned.
#16
Posted 09 February 2000 - 08:13
Damn, you just can't have any fun these days

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Ursus
Trust me, send money.