Alonso Fan wrote:I just don't understand why people are so surprised at this. It's almost as though people actually expected the engine to be a merc beater this year, which is nonsense if you think carefully about it
It's not about creating a Mercedes beater. I think the goal should be (should have been?) to create an engine that is somewhat competitive. The most important aspect however is to show up with an engine that works, doesn't have any major flaws that hampers testing. We saw how that turned out in 2014 with Renault for instance, when the majority of teams running Renault engines had severe problems. That was year 1, so perhaps one could argue that problems were foreseeable given the complexity and that we are no longer dealing with just ICUs but with entire power-units that not only include the ICU, but complex kinetic energy recovery system that are on an entirely new level.
Honda entered in 2015 and has since had 2 full seasons to learn from experience what is required to compete on this level. I understand that the first 2 seasons were unique in that the PUs were limited by tokens and thus created the situation that a potentially faulty or underperforming engine could not be solved or changed unless within what the [available] tokens allowed.
As I said in this or the other topic: We shouldn't just single out Honda here. To some degree, I expect Honda to know their own limits and be competent enough to know what is doable, what they can achieve and to know how far to push limits without going too far. We also have to accept that McLaren has wanted this 'exclusive' partnership and this is surely something that limits Honda as they have much less data they can collect (or that data is limited to one running configuration; that being their engine inside that McLaren). Compare this to say Renault, who supplied 4 teams in 2014 (Caterham, Lotus, RedBull and TR). Even though the Renault PU had issues, by having 4 teams, they at least got to study the data of 4 teams, all running different packages. If I remember correctly, the TR for example had less PU related problems than the RedBull. At the time, I assumed this was due to the tighter packaging of the RedBull compared to the TR. In the case of Honda, this is a problem, because there is effectively only one car.
Another problem I see, is that Honda has changed their configuration quite substantially multiple times now. Effectively, this means that they are starting from something akin to a blank sheet every time. Mercedes however seems to be still running using the same basic configuration they did way back in 2014. And every PU since has been an evolution. Building upon the strengths of the previous iteration and just pushing a bit forward as they progress. This makes them extremely hard to beat. This perhaps also highlights that Honda simply got it wrong the first two times and is now heading on the right path at least to an engine that should be competitive. Or they are still pursuing more exotic yet at the same time more challenging designs that prove rather difficult to get right, hence all the reliability issues they are fighting.
One way or another; Both McLaren and Honda will have to learn the hard way that going for the most ambitious solution perhaps isn't the best idea if you can't get it to work. When it all works, it might prove to be the best engine outthere, but at what cost? If you limit your running, then McLaren can't do its work. The same applies too if McLaren goes too ambitious by perhaps packaging too tightly (and as an example gets the cooling requirements wrong). That can also limit the potential of the engine too.
It would be nice to see both McLaren-Honda end up with an engine that is reliable and proves to be a strong basis for future development. I unfortunately don't see how they will be able to be competitive this year, but with the tokens gone, I hope whatever problems they are facing now, can be solved rather quickly. The question will be, how quick and how many races will it take? It will also be interesting in light of Alonso's contract expiring at the end of the year...
And there is also the point about the lack of sponsors on that McLaren...