
Peogot vs Ilmor Engine
#1
Posted 07 October 1999 - 17:38
Prost's engine weighs 120kg, but Peogot was reluctant to release the performance figures. Its also almost 1½ times bigger than the Mclaren engine. Ilmor weighs 105kgs if I remember correctly. I think Macs weight reduction comes from the Al/Be alloy which is allegedly extensively used in the engine. That alloy was banned for 2001 so now you have to wonder what will happen in 2001.
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#2
Posted 15 January 2000 - 17:02
#3
Posted 16 January 2000 - 05:17
#4
Posted 16 January 2000 - 22:34
#5
Posted 17 January 2000 - 19:40
#6
Posted 22 January 2000 - 22:38
The Peugeot 304 engine is an all aluminium 1300cc 4-cyl with no surplus weight anywhere, and it weighs in at around 85kg. For a V10 there is so much more crank, so many more rods, three times as many cams, then there's camshaft drives and tensioners, oil pumps and a bucketload of other lighter parts. Twice as many heads, too. How can it be?
#7
Posted 23 January 2000 - 08:10
#8
Posted 23 January 2000 - 16:05
I guess what I'm saying is "Please confirm the figure, authoratively."
#9
Posted 24 January 2000 - 18:57
#10
Posted 26 January 2000 - 10:29
#11
Posted 28 January 2000 - 03:53
#12
Posted 03 February 2000 - 17:16
#13
Posted 03 February 2000 - 18:24
#14
Posted 03 February 2000 - 19:44
4 cyls, 110bhp max versus 10 cyls & 750bhp!
And who said F1 didn't bring progress?
#15
Posted 03 February 2000 - 08:11
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Ursus
Trust me, send money.
#17
Posted 03 February 2000 - 22:41
It was an interesting article Racetech maybe a year ago.
#18
Posted 24 February 2000 - 02:42
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Germany's Sport Auto reports the following F1 engine weights and vee angles, almost all of which we've seen confirmed either by the teams involved or by reliable sources close to them. Interestingly, Ferrari has the widest V10, and its vee angle has been confirmed by the team.
In order of weight:
kilos/pounds/vee angle(degrees)
Cosworth-Jaguar . . . 97 213.9 72
Mercedes. . . . . . . 98 216.1 72
Ferrari . . . . . . . 100 220.5 90
Peugeot . . . . . . . 109 240.3 72
Honda-BAR . . . . . . 110 242.6 88
Ferrari-Petronas. . . 114 251.3 80
Mugen-Honda . . . . . 115 253.6 72
Renault-Supertec. . . 118 260.2 71
BMW . . . . . . . . . 120 264.6 72
Cosworth-Fondmetal. . 122 269.0 72
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Look at the difference between the Jag (Cosworth) engine and the Cosworth of two years ago that Minardi are getting!
#19
Posted 24 February 2000 - 04:09
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#20
Posted 24 February 2000 - 06:27
#21
Posted 27 February 2000 - 00:49
By the way, don't write off that BMW lump just yet- their early stock block F2 engine was so tall and bulky the teams referred to it as "The Monument", and yet by 1983 it had evolved into a reasonably effective piece of power generating machinery. Ask Alain Prost and Bernard Dudot!
#22
Posted 01 March 2000 - 12:09
Sauber reports the Petronas at 110 kg. Hard to know who has everything correct or who might be lying. Could Ferrari really chop 14 kilos off of the 048 to the 049.
Secondly, wasn't beryllium banned in F1? I thought that was mentioned once somewhere and that it gave Sauber a few concerns about the engine. The reliability was no longer a given.
Prost has the Peugeot at under 120 and that's it. If they were really 109 you'd think they'd say under 110 to be impressive.
Just today I was doing research trying to find the dimensions of the engines along with the weights and Arrows and Benetton have differing numbers on the width of the Supertec. They both confirm the length is 623 mm and that the height is 393 mm. Arrows has it at 393, Benetton at 395, close enough. Arrows has the width at 517 mm, while Benetton has the width at 542.
Here are some other figures I got from each team's web pages.
Peugeot-
Length: 583 mm
Width: 544 mm
Height: 393 mm
Weight: <120 kg
Jordan
Lenght: <620 mm
Widht: <520 mm
Height: <400 mm
I discussed the Supertec, other than that, no major information. I also was trying to gain the specs on all the cars as far as their overall length, overall width, height, front track, rear track, and wheel base. For engines I was looking for displacement, weight, degre, valves, length, width, and height. All the engines have 40 valves I believe and of course all cars end up weighing 600 kg after the chassis, engine, driver, fuel, liquids, etc, are combined. Pretty light when you consider it all.
If Prost's figures are correct, then the Peugeot really has improved it's center of gravity BIG TIME. That's very important. All these figures are important to know. The various numbers I got for the car specs were interesting. The Arrows is listed as WAY longer than any other car. Of the ones that released specs, Ferrari was the shortest at 4387 mm while Arrows was at 5140 mm!!! I imagine most of the F1 cars will be between 4400 and 4600 in length more or less. Width looks pretty set between 1790 and 1800 mm. Doubt anybody is going to be taller than a meter. Sauber is listed as such. Jordan is listed at 950 mm. The other odd thing about Arrows is that they had the shortest wheelbase at 2995 mm. Ferrari was next at 3010. Williams, of the teams that released specs, was 3140. The only teams that had all the chassis specs I wanted were Ferrari and Sauber. No engine had all the exact specs. Peugeot was the closest, but their weight wasn't exact.
#23
Posted 01 March 2000 - 12:54
#24
Posted 01 March 2000 - 17:06
The first is because it suits the teams, and their suppliers.
The second is that what is included in engine weights and dimensions is not a "given". Do you include exhaust, clutch, air box etc? Presumably teams are consistent within their own figures year on year? But then consider reason one

#25
Posted 05 March 2000 - 13:42
#26
Posted 05 March 2000 - 21:15
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Life and love are mixed with pain...
#27
Posted 06 March 2000 - 00:47
[This message has been edited by FordFan (edited 03-05-2000).]
#28
Posted 07 March 2000 - 00:23
#29
Posted 08 March 2000 - 00:28
#30
Posted 08 March 2000 - 04:57
Gotcha! };->
#31
Posted 12 March 2000 - 13:48
Can't wait to hear the spin M-B's publicity flacks try to put on this one.
#32
Posted 14 March 2000 - 00:58
Sounds like the underweight, underpowered, unreliable, underfinanced Yamaha engine (built by Judd) was a leader then, where it has gone others have followed. It seems it would still put the Cosworth and Ilmor in the shade for weight, and size! (93Kg I read in '97!)
Where did BMW find the engineers to make their engine work? Do you think they may have recruited some from Judd's, Cosworth, Ilmor, and Hart's? Or do you think they went to the main Engine Drafting Office in Munich and asked for volounteers????
Cosworth is a 'Tuner' owned by a manufacturer (Ford), Ilmor is a 'Tuner' owned by a manufacturer (Merc - Benz), Mugen is a 'Tuner' related by birth to a manufacturer ......
Maybe they went to a NASCAR outfit like Rousch!!!
Billy G
#33
Posted 14 March 2000 - 03:56
John Judd 1998
#34
Posted 14 March 2000 - 08:34
The Ecu on the Arrows A18 was mounted on the RH side of the sidepod in a cut-away drawing I have got, along with the Ignition Ecu. So that should have been shipped with the car?
The 93Kg was shipping weight - now granted this would almost certainly have been without airbox, headers, Hydro pack, and possibly clutch too. Like someone said earlier its difficult to judge like with like when we don't know how people are weighing these things. The OX11A still has to be regognised as the trend setter. I wonder if they resorted to super light alloys - my bet is that on the tight budget they operated on they didn't have anything exotic.
What are folks spin on the reasons for Yamaha being in F1 with no gain - were they there as a front for someone like Toyota, just keeping a watching brief but not exposing the paymasters????
Lookinanlearnindivinanaduckin!
Billy G
#35
Posted 14 March 2000 - 14:53