I think this is a good perspective.
If you remove all the trappings from that video, you end up with "they think", "still haven't figured out"..... then "maybe it's Newey's fault for coming up with a good idea".etusch wrote: ↑04 Apr 2026, 12:19I think this is a good perspective.
https://youtube.com/shorts/WINm6HAeqcw? ... czCkrTih5w
My point is quite different. It is not about knowing something new. But looking the situation as, they aimed something, basically they achieved to build it but it is not working for now. It is probably what lived in all new projects but in this case in front of so many people.bigblue wrote: ↑04 Apr 2026, 14:20That's clipped out of a longer discussion (the-race The Undercut podcast on YouTube, "Why Adrian Newey's F1 projects only end in triumph or disaster") about Newey, and to some extent the current Aston Martin situation. Nothing new or unknown in there, but fun enough listen about Newey in general.
I honda the only team with this engine layout?.etusch wrote: ↑04 Apr 2026, 12:19I think this is a good perspective.
https://youtube.com/shorts/WINm6HAeqcw? ... czCkrTih5w
The regs dictate where you can connect to the crankshaft.CHT wrote: ↑05 Apr 2026, 15:00I honda the only team with this engine layout?.etusch wrote: ↑04 Apr 2026, 12:19I think this is a good perspective.
https://youtube.com/shorts/WINm6HAeqcw? ... czCkrTih5w
If written like this, I don't see this precluding a side MGU. You say it's only for the transmission.diffuser wrote: ↑05 Apr 2026, 16:42The regs dictate where you can connect to the crankshaft.
The front of the ICE is defined as zero. Moving toward the rear of the ICE corresponds to positive values, while moving toward the front of the car corresponds to negative values. The regulations state that the MGU-K transmission must connect to the crankshaft no further than +100 mm and extend forward from that point. The regs force the MGU-K to protrude out the front of the ICE.
So nobody has the MGU-K right along side the block like previous years cause the regs prevent it.
Well, you have 100mm to fit the MGU-K along side the ICE. Anything more than 100mm has to protrud out the front. I don't think anyone can make it that small.mzso wrote: ↑05 Apr 2026, 18:48If written like this, I don't see this precluding a side MGU. You say it's only for the transmission.diffuser wrote: ↑05 Apr 2026, 16:42The regs dictate where you can connect to the crankshaft.
The front of the ICE is defined as zero. Moving toward the rear of the ICE corresponds to positive values, while moving toward the front of the car corresponds to negative values. The regulations state that the MGU-K transmission must connect to the crankshaft no further than +100 mm and extend forward from that point. The regs force the MGU-K to protrude out the front of the ICE.
So nobody has the MGU-K right along side the block like previous years cause the regs prevent it.
I agree and also hope Miami will be the first race of the season for the team with a decent step forward. If they can sort out these vibration issues to a degree and turn up the power unit to 100% it should get them closer to Williams as the 9th best team. I think anything more than that is probably unrealistic this year if the power unit is down so much in power, and also so utterly underwhelming in recovering energy. 2027 should be the focus immediately so this diabolical embarrassment doesn’t happen again next year. Dont worry about upgrading this
The aero rules don't change next year. Might as well keep putting on upgrades get the correlation right. Make use of the real world wind tunnel.V10FURY wrote: ↑06 Apr 2026, 20:00I agree and also hope Miami will be the first race of the season for the team with a decent step forward. If they can sort out these vibration issues to a degree and turn up the power unit to 100% it should get them closer to Williams as the 9th best team. I think anything more than that is probably unrealistic this year if the power unit is down so much in power, and also so utterly underwhelming in recovering energy. 2027 should be the focus immediately so this diabolical embarrassment doesn’t happen again next year. Dont worry about upgrading this![]()
anymore and just spend all time and money ensuring they have a title contending car for 2027. I still think they should probably have a cut off when they switch to the Audi engine system for 2027 also this year . A deadline that Honda must show on the bench and in a chassis that the 2027 engine is both competitive and will not shake the car into bits.
In the case of Honda PU, the entire MGU-K is in front of the engine, nothing in the + positive region.diffuser wrote: ↑05 Apr 2026, 16:42The regs dictate where you can connect to the crankshaft.CHT wrote: ↑05 Apr 2026, 15:00I honda the only team with this engine layout?.etusch wrote: ↑04 Apr 2026, 12:19I think this is a good perspective.
https://youtube.com/shorts/WINm6HAeqcw? ... czCkrTih5w
The front of the ICE is defined as zero. Moving toward the rear of the ICE corresponds to positive values, while moving toward the front of the car corresponds to negative values. The regulations state that the MGU-K transmission must connect to the crankshaft no further than +100 mm and extend forward from that point. The regs force the MGU-K to protrude out the front of the ICE.
So nobody has the MGU-K right along side the block like previous years cause the regs prevent it.
So they brought a fix to vibrations on the steering system. Decided not to use it or inform the driver about it.FW17 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 15:37Aston was not bothered in bringing a better cushion and isolator pads for the seat and steering wheel and columnBassVirolla wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 14:12- steering wheel, engine, seat and pedals have to be stiffly fitted to chassis. Maybe you can play with aero surfaces pylons and suspension attachmentd, but the elements you mentioned make no sense at all.FW17 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 13:49
So Honda brought in solution to protect the battery from the vibrations.
Newey and AMR were twiddling their thumbs, not protecting the steering wheel, seat or the pedals for the driver.
Just like live with a stiff car, live with vibrations, it was probably a design feature of Neweys to get more downforce and less drag to make the car go faster.
- isn't getting more downforce, less drag and, hence, going faster the leit motiv of a race car?
- when you have a problem is better to patch around or solving the source? Apart from the tarmac irregularities, there are no more vibration sources than the engine and the gearbox.