Fair, I just did it all from memory and a quick google from race reports from the weekend. I knew it was never a fully accurate list in terms of what went wrong where.
Fair, I just did it all from memory and a quick google from race reports from the weekend. I knew it was never a fully accurate list in terms of what went wrong where.
I don't know if this one is same issue with what Lec had at spain, but if so there is another issue. Because they investigated mgu-h and found nothing wrong. They don't know what cause failiure
Any news on what part of the PU was damaged? If its only turbo or MGU-H it may be repairable?etusch wrote: ↑12 Jun 2022, 16:17I don't know if this one is same issue with what Lec had at spain, but if so there is another issue. Because they investigated mgu-h and found nothing wrong. They don't know what cause failiure
I'm quite sure the FIA needs to accept the change. As and edge case they might as well just submit a completely new design, which is much more reliable, but also better in all other regards as well.
Other manufacturers are also informed of the changes and they can agree/object to the proposed changes.mzso wrote:Despite the ridicule I got here, the PU-s keep dropping dead even faster. Monaco wasn't even a normal race, cold, slow, and a shorter distance than others, also power didn't matter much.
Since Leclerc's died again, early in the race, it doesn't seem like it can even handle a full normal race. In contrast, I don't remember the RB having failures to components that are subject to a quota. Even the first PU they just replaced is still usable the way I heard.
Sad for Leclerc. There's always next year I guess. If Ferrari can fix reliability without giving up performance.
I'm quite sure the FIA needs to accept the change. As and edge case they might as well just submit a completely new design, which is much more reliable, but also better in all other regards as well.
No they can't. It's to the sole discretion of the FIA. The FIA probes other teams for their opinion on whether the update is a reliability update in their opinion, but the FIA can do whatever they want, the opinion from the teams isn't binding.lh13 wrote: ↑12 Jun 2022, 21:08Other manufacturers are also informed of the changes and they can agree/object to the proposed changes.mzso wrote:Despite the ridicule I got here, the PU-s keep dropping dead even faster. Monaco wasn't even a normal race, cold, slow, and a shorter distance than others, also power didn't matter much.
Since Leclerc's died again, early in the race, it doesn't seem like it can even handle a full normal race. In contrast, I don't remember the RB having failures to components that are subject to a quota. Even the first PU they just replaced is still usable the way I heard.
Sad for Leclerc. There's always next year I guess. If Ferrari can fix reliability without giving up performance.
I'm quite sure the FIA needs to accept the change. As and edge case they might as well just submit a completely new design, which is much more reliable, but also better in all other regards as well.
I didn't know that. So if a manufacturer thinks that the changes are not purely reliability related, it is up to them to make a case strong enough to convince the FIA.dialtone wrote:No they can't. It's to the sole discretion of the FIA. The FIA probes other teams for their opinion on whether the update is a reliability update in their opinion, but the FIA can do whatever they want, the opinion from the teams isn't binding.lh13 wrote: ↑12 Jun 2022, 21:08Other manufacturers are also informed of the changes and they can agree/object to the proposed changes.mzso wrote:Despite the ridicule I got here, the PU-s keep dropping dead even faster. Monaco wasn't even a normal race, cold, slow, and a shorter distance than others, also power didn't matter much.
Since Leclerc's died again, early in the race, it doesn't seem like it can even handle a full normal race. In contrast, I don't remember the RB having failures to components that are subject to a quota. Even the first PU they just replaced is still usable the way I heard.
Sad for Leclerc. There's always next year I guess. If Ferrari can fix reliability without giving up performance.
I'm quite sure the FIA needs to accept the change. As and edge case they might as well just submit a completely new design, which is much more reliable, but also better in all other regards as well.
Yes basically. But the FIA is full of very technical people and former F1 people too, they don't actually need the teams opinion. The showing items to other teams is really to discourage doing too much with an update but limiting it to really the minimal part that you are forced to reveal. Of course FIA isn't perfect and they may miss something and any team can attempt at convincing them, and they could successful, but it will likely just open up a longer discussion since of course a team whose engines just had so many failures like Ferrari did, is simply going to try again in a different way, and to persuade FIA that Zhou or Magnussen were running super pumped up version of the engine to go up against RedBull is obviously not going to be convincing.lh13 wrote: ↑12 Jun 2022, 21:12I didn't know that. So if a manufacturer thinks that the changes are not purely reliability related, it is up to them to make a case strong enough to convince the FIA.dialtone wrote:No they can't. It's to the sole discretion of the FIA. The FIA probes other teams for their opinion on whether the update is a reliability update in their opinion, but the FIA can do whatever they want, the opinion from the teams isn't binding.
If it indeed is the ICE than Ferrari is in big trouble. Fixing that is not easy, especially if you don't want to reduce efficiency and power output.gshevlin wrote: ↑12 Jun 2022, 21:24From a view of Carlos' steering wheel after he stopped, the transmission was saying it was in 2nd gear, but it sounded like a boxful of neutrals to me as he tried to make the corner.
Charles' failure sounded like an ICE failure. Suddenly the ICE is running down from accelerating, blue oil smoke everywhere, out of the exhausts and airbox, with no power to get the car back to pit lane. KMag had similar smoke coming out of his airbox and exhausts.
I think the ICE was unable to survive the Baku race duty cycle profile.