MotoGP: Electronics and acceleration

Since MotoGP winter testing, Valentino Rossi has repeatedly emphasised the need fo🐭r Yamaha to improve acceleration via the electronics.

"All the Ducatis are better in acceleration, because they are more in front compared to us in th🔯e electronics," the Italian s🐲aid in February.

"When MotoGP moved to the [single ECU] we have s🔯ome problem. Honda and Ducati understand something we🉐 don't."

MotoGP: Electronics and acceleration

Since MotoGP winter testing, Valentino Rossi has repeatedly emphasised the need for Yamaha to imp𓃲rove acceleration via the electronics.

"All the Ducatis are ﷽better in acceleration, because they are more in front compared to us in the electronics," the Italian said in February.

"When MotoGP move𒐪d to the [single ECU] we have some ♛problem. Honda and Ducati understand something we don't."

In another exchange with the media, Rossi said: "During last year Honda and Ducati put a lot of money and a lot of people to work around the electronics. Maybe Yamaha not enough. So we are a bit in de🧸lay…

“It's a shame, because the rest of our bike is go𓆉od. From what I understand, this [electronic] work needs time. You have to work 🃏on the black box [ECU]."

During last weekend's struggles at the slippery Spanish MotoGP, Rossi again describe🐻d the M1's problems as 25% mechanical and 75% electronics.

After the Monday test, he added: “We found something f🔯or the acceleration, but it was just a first step. I hope that afte🦄r Barcelona we can try something more important [with the electronics].”

But in a championship where ECU softwarꦗe and hardware is the same for all, ꦆhow exactly does a manufacturer gain an acceleration edge purely in terms of electronics?

The answer, according to MotoGP Director Of Technology Corrado Cecchinelli, is "by me🐈ans of calibration."

In other words, while the way the ECU works (throཧugh calculations, strategies and functions) is the same for all, the thousands of numbers that decide 'if this happens, do that' are 🌃programmed into the system by each manufacturer, to suit each bike.

It is these numbers th🐬at are referred to by Cecchinelli as calibration.

The Italian, who was Vice Director General of Ducati Corse from 2006 to 2010 before accepting his current role, told mahbx.com:

"The so-called 'chassis control strategies' - traction control, wheelie control - all share the same fun🍰ctioning mode. Which is: Getting inputs, thinking about the inputs and outputting a torque reduction request.

"That request may of course be '0', if you are undeജr the limit of the bike.

"All of them make a fight... If you are spinning more than wheelieing, the traction control wins෴ andꦅ the [ECU] system delivers the torque reduction."

For the specific c😼🅠ase of improving straight-line acceleration:

"The strategies that would normally operate are basically just traction control and wheeౠlie control. In the case of a standing start, you also have launch co🦂ntrol.

"So if you are accelerating in a straight line, traction control and wheelie control operate in parallel. If one of the two finds a reason to reduce the torque, it sends a torque reduction🍬 request.

"In the simp🦄lest case of straight-line acceleration on dry tarmac, the limit is actually wheelieing.

"Let's assume the calibration of the wheelie control is too restrictive - so that it cuts before the bike even wheelies, or 💛cuts when the wheelie is not a problem - then you are not accelerating enough.

"Tಌhis is common with traction control in road cars. You can feel that is it too restrictive and you would be better without it, if y🍎ou are an above-average driver.

"The same goes sometimes with ABS in road cars, w꧋hich is acting way more 🐲often than you would expect. You get the feeling you could brake better without it, which is not generally true!

"So if Yamaha riders feel that the nature of th๊e bike would be to accelerate more than it does, they 🃏will keep asking their engineers to properly tune the strategies to unleash the full potential of the bike.

"It's a game of being on the right side of the limit, but as close as po๊ssible."

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Given the crucial role of ECU calibration, how do manufacturers come up with the right num𝓰bers?

"I would say a big part is calculation and small part trial-and-error,ꦕ" Cecchinelli replied.

"ꦫYou cannot calculate everything at home because when you come to a real race track and have some dust on the surface, a specific temperature, a certain type of tyre and so on."

Adding to the comp♔lication is th🐼at many of the calibration numbers need to be changed from circuit to circuit.

To speed up the number crunching, especially if changes are needed at the track itself, manufacturers devel𝔍op a simplified 'interface tool' which can tweak lots of related numbers at once.

"Normally what all the manufacturers do🌳 is they develop a sort of interface tool - in-between their calculations and the calibration tool we give - which is easier for them to use and generate a calibration in the software language," Cecchinelli explaine𝔉d.

"Everybody is developing their own proprietary interface that goes 'upstream' of the calibration too♍l."

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