Boulier on Ted Notebook;
There will be some upgrade from Honda already next week, and that will let's say a more definite 2016 PU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TGGt2q ... e=youtu.be MIN 10:00
No... Trust me on that! lol.ctdrftna wrote:I bet the moderators are engineers...
Sincerely
The Machinist
Actually he saysGoranF1 wrote:Boulier on Ted Notebook;
There will be some upgrade from Honda already next week, and that will let's say a more definite 2016 PU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TGGt2q ... e=youtu.be MIN 10:00
Absolutely my fault mate.hemichromis wrote:I only meant it as a tease, Wazari said that the 'geriatric crew' was one of teams working on the power unit. I have heard elsewhere that this will be the mark 2 unit. He then says that he will be busy and will have to stop posting here, an obvious joke perhaps but that was all it was.Webber2011 wrote:I'm not sure what you mean there, but it sounds quite disrespectful considering Wazari's knowledge.hemichromis wrote:I heard Wazari is coming out of retirement to take over the project.....
I could be totally wrong, and I'm sorry if I did indeed read it the wrong way, but Wazari contributes slightly more to the forum than you ever have.
I am - to be honest - puzzled at how i offended you, I certainly hope i didn't offend Mr Wazari.
As to your second point i take exception only to the word 'slightly'!
Why is it that Honda here is singled out again and again as the one within the chain that is underperforming? As far as I understand, the size-zero concept is not something that originated from Honda, but from McLaren, because they obviously have certain aero goals they want to achieve. Naturally, it takes two to find the right balance - the aero is only as effective if the engine is not too compromised, but it also takes a certain amount of expertise and confidence to know what can be achieved with the PU within the boundaries that are set.ringo wrote:Anyhow, the news from Honda is not good and i think it shows how politics has a way of misdirecting a whole project.
Having the right leadership is very crucial. If you have a project leader/manager that is close minded you will have a lot of problems along the way and i say this looking on what Honda has done from 2015. They refused to listen to outsiders and they were hell bent on pursuing some pipe dream "size zero" philosophy in a blind and very vein manner.
I hope there is levelheadedness and logic applied to how they run things now. The engineers are tools, and their energies need to directed in the right fashion. No matter how good they are, if they are asked to design and develop rubbish, it will just be a well engineered piece of rubbish at the end of the day (not to say the Honda PU project is rubbish, but just using an extreme).
So hopefully Honda gets things back on track with this new for 2016 engine. And it would make 2017 even more optimistic if they just scrap size zero alltogether and make a kick ass brute of a PU.
I wouldn't be to sure about that.Phil wrote: As far as I understand, the size-zero concept is not something that originated from Honda, but from McLaren, because they obviously have certain aero goals they want to achieve.....
Boullier:... McLaren once told us that we don't have to be aggressive in downsizing our power unit. But we are determined to shrink the size by whatever means possible.
Boullier and Hasegawa:“We told them we wanted the tightest car as possible. But we never imposed on them in terms of size of whatever.”
I mean of course nobody at Mclaren complained about having more space to play with. But i don't think Size Zero was solely based on one Party. Honda wanted to show what's possible and McLaren was happy with potential Aero gains.
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
If MCL were asking the impossible (which is not the case, just check Thunders' post) and Honda didn't tell them that what they are asking is impossible I would interpret that as being mainly Honda's fault. You cannot blame one of asking something (in a partnership there is no room for dictates). You can blame someone for promising someone to achieve something and then not achieving it.Phil wrote:I think I'd look at it more as a failing of both parties, or setting too high goals/targets that are practically unachievable, where a more conservative approach might have yielded better results?
So problems were: reliability, ICE, the ERS (harvest and deployment).
so Mclaren top speed is lower than last year (326 km/h) which says that they are not running the engine at full power so which should wait for true picture of honda engine..isullivan wrote:Speed trap from day 3 of testing
1 Nasr, 338.5km/h
2 Hamilton, 337.5km/h
3 Massa, 334.3km/h
4 Hulkenberg, 333.3km/h
5 Haryanto, 333.3km/h
6 Magnussen, 332.3km/h
7 Grosjean, 331.2km/h
8 Raikkonen, 331.2km/h
9 Rosberg, 328.2km/h
10 Sainz, 327.2km/h
11 Kvyat, 322.3km/h
12 Button, 320.4km/h
Great links, thanks. I guess that clears it up then.Thunders wrote:I mean of course nobody at Mclaren complained about having more space to play with. But i don't think Size Zero was solely based on one Party. Honda wanted to show what's possible and McLaren was happy with potential Aero gains.