'white finger' is/was called Froelich's disease (Dr Frolich with an umlaut)Farnborough wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 15:55With LS statement "like being electrocuted in a chair " with UK power supply @ 50Hz, then that would be wave form harmonic from MGU-K (given it's rotation at peak load or near to it) and possibly causing resonance/echo in the crankshaft
Very much lower you'd get "whitefinger" :D from something like a British twin motorcycle in 360 degree crank arrangement.
Didn't they just say they spent the last 2 weeks working on the full car dyno to prevent the vibrations effecting the battery? Sounds like they can replicate it.Holm86 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 21:42I have a hard time believing Honda isn't capable of simulating drivetrain harmonics via software, and if the MGU-K and it's gearbox is the problem, wouldn't it have shown up on engine dynos? And couldn't they have run the tests with the MGU-K decoupled, just to get some more running time??
A 90-degree V6 is inherently more difficult to balance. For smooth operation, the engine requires evenly spaced combustion events every 120 degrees of crankshaft rotation. However, this cannot be achieved if opposing cylinders share the same crank journal. To correct this, the crankpins are split and offset, allowing the engine to simulate the firing geometry of a 60-degree V6. This produces evenly spaced 120° firing intervals and significantly improves balance and smoothness.mzso wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 18:27Hm. Maybe Honda decided that the pistons should move in unison.
But where can I watch or read the whole thing?gearboxtrouble wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 05:02A truly remarkable press conference from Newey. My sense is that he's resistant to the idea that his chassis could be the cause of the vibrations and is putting the onus of fixing it squarely on Honda. I can't see how something in the way the engine interacts with the mounts or the transmission is not the primary cause of these issues which were clearly absent from the test bench. I wonder if the shorter battery lets them move the engine up closer to the driver and this is a contributor to the increased shaking. I'm not sure the blame for this is Honda's alone.
How could be the car the source? It's the engine that vibrates. But why does it vibrate too much? Again I'm reminded of the 919 issues where they had to re-design it with a new crankshaft.
These engines are odd firing V6's and has been since 2014. Only one crankshaft design is legal, and that's 3 throws with 120° spacing. Offset crankpins are not allowed. So there's nothing to redesigndiffuser wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 22:28A 90-degree V6 is inherently more difficult to balance. For smooth operation, the engine requires evenly spaced combustion events every 120 degrees of crankshaft rotation. However, this cannot be achieved if opposing cylinders share the same crank journal. To correct this, the crankpins are split and offset, allowing the engine to simulate the firing geometry of a 60-degree V6. This produces evenly spaced 120° firing intervals and significantly improves balance and smoothness.mzso wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 18:27Hm. Maybe Honda decided that the pistons should move in unison.
But where can I watch or read the whole thing?gearboxtrouble wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 05:02A truly remarkable press conference from Newey. My sense is that he's resistant to the idea that his chassis could be the cause of the vibrations and is putting the onus of fixing it squarely on Honda. I can't see how something in the way the engine interacts with the mounts or the transmission is not the primary cause of these issues which were clearly absent from the test bench. I wonder if the shorter battery lets them move the engine up closer to the driver and this is a contributor to the increased shaking. I'm not sure the blame for this is Honda's alone.
How could be the car the source? It's the engine that vibrates. But why does it vibrate too much? Again I'm reminded of the 919 issues where they had to re-design it with a new crankshaft.
But Honda has done that before... I doudt this is it.
I don't see any crankpin phasing restrictions in the regs.Holm86 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 23:11These engines are odd firing V6's and has been since 2014. Only one crankshaft design is legal, and that's 3 throws with 120° spacing. Offset crankpins are not allowed. So there's nothing to redesigndiffuser wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 22:28A 90-degree V6 is inherently more difficult to balance. For smooth operation, the engine requires evenly spaced combustion events every 120 degrees of crankshaft rotation. However, this cannot be achieved if opposing cylinders share the same crank journal. To correct this, the crankpins are split and offset, allowing the engine to simulate the firing geometry of a 60-degree V6. This produces evenly spaced 120° firing intervals and significantly improves balance and smoothness.mzso wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 18:27Hm. Maybe Honda decided that the pistons should move in unison.
But where can I watch or read the whole thing?
How could be the car the source? It's the engine that vibrates. But why does it vibrate too much? Again I'm reminded of the 919 issues where they had to re-design it with a new crankshaft.
But Honda has done that before... I doudt this is it.
I see it would weaken the crank to use splitpins.....Instead of using the V-angle to determine timing, they design the crank like this:diffuser wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 23:45I don't see any crankpin phasing restrictions in the regs.Holm86 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 23:11These engines are odd firing V6's and has been since 2014. Only one crankshaft design is legal, and that's 3 throws with 120° spacing. Offset crankpins are not allowed. So there's nothing to redesigndiffuser wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 22:28
A 90-degree V6 is inherently more difficult to balance. For smooth operation, the engine requires evenly spaced combustion events every 120 degrees of crankshaft rotation. However, this cannot be achieved if opposing cylinders share the same crank journal. To correct this, the crankpins are split and offset, allowing the engine to simulate the firing geometry of a 60-degree V6. This produces evenly spaced 120° firing intervals and significantly improves balance and smoothness.
But Honda has done that before... I doudt this is it.
@TCTommy Cookers wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 21:52
the MGU-K rotates at 1000 revs/sec ie 1 msec/rev
nominally there is no torque ripple (only the torque from individual phase windings varies with rotation)
torque is reviewed at about 1 kHz but the rate of change of torque is limited
yes the gearing to the crankshaft might have some non-ideal effect