the car brake on pit lane before any touch on kerbs ...and on install lap ...the pressures and heat on reality its far away from test bench...for sure honda its going to oz with match stronger seals ..its the most simple solution and can do it fast but lets see ...3jawchuck wrote:I think this sounds very reasonable. With all the dyno testing that they claim has been done, it is very unlikely the problems they are having are anything but forced vibration brought on by the motion of the car. The oil tank problem was a result of being unable to simulate/estimate the effects of motion on the ability of the pump to supply oil to the engine.luke352 wrote:Quite easy to see the vibrations being missed on a test bed. Although it has the same mounting points those mounting points are attached to very solid framework which is then probably secured into a concrete slab. All this would act to dampen the overall level of the vibrations. You then turn around and bolt the engine into a very light although stiff structure, this has a very poor ability to assist in dampening the vibrations. The result is the overall level of the vibrations are higher then what they probably saw on the dyno rig.Dimi wrote:I cant understand how vibrations affect electronic systems and why is so difficult for an automotive manufacturer to solve this.
- vibrations affect connectors?
- cause cold joints to cirquits?
- affect rotating parts of other electrical devices like altenators -mguh?
finally how is possible not to have discovered vibration problems on test beds?
I have no doubt Honda can sort these problems out, but by the time they do, how far ahead will the more reliable engines be in terms of power?
That could have been installation issues, also they had had a filming day just prior to the test. No idea what engine they used there though.ollandos wrote:the car brake on pit lane before any touch on kerbs ...and on install lap ...the pressures and heat on reality its far away from test bench...for sure honda its going to oz with match stronger seals ..its the most simple solution and can do it fast but lets see ...3jawchuck wrote:I think this sounds very reasonable. With all the dyno testing that they claim has been done, it is very unlikely the problems they are having are anything but forced vibration brought on by the motion of the car. The oil tank problem was a result of being unable to simulate/estimate the effects of motion on the ability of the pump to supply oil to the engine.luke352 wrote:
Quite easy to see the vibrations being missed on a test bed. Although it has the same mounting points those mounting points are attached to very solid framework which is then probably secured into a concrete slab. All this would act to dampen the overall level of the vibrations. You then turn around and bolt the engine into a very light although stiff structure, this has a very poor ability to assist in dampening the vibrations. The result is the overall level of the vibrations are higher then what they probably saw on the dyno rig.
I have no doubt Honda can sort these problems out, but by the time they do, how far ahead will the more reliable engines be in terms of power?
Yeah I agree they are putting up a brave face that's for sure, Hence why Alonso has sounded them out! so if they were in doubt if they are holding McLaren back, there is none now!harjan wrote:Prior to the testing days several sources said; the engine on the dyno is unreliable (loosing bits & pieces) and underpowered. In hindsight these sources might have been more accurate then we hoped at the time.
Honda claiming that they didn't have the issues on the dyno might be more defensive marketing speak than we wish to believe.
ncassi22 wrote:More from Hasegawa.
http://www.racer.com/f1/item/138818-rel ... urne-honda
The PU is both unreliable and down on power. I don't think they are related if I understand him correctly.dr_cooke wrote:ncassi22 wrote:More from Hasegawa.
http://www.racer.com/f1/item/138818-rel ... urne-honda
That's somenthing I can't understand... I would accept that they found some unexpected reliability issues that did not show up in the dyno, even if those issues are.. well... enormous. What I do not believe is that the engine is proving to be underpowered. I mean, they must exactly know engine's power from their dyno tests. Unless he means that they will solve unreliability by heavily detuning, but that is not what I understand from Hasegawa sacho's words.
I think he ment if we fix reliability for AUS, it will be at the price of performance.dren wrote:The PU is both unreliable and down on power. I don't think they are related if I understand him correctly.dr_cooke wrote:ncassi22 wrote:More from Hasegawa.
http://www.racer.com/f1/item/138818-rel ... urne-honda
That's somenthing I can't understand... I would accept that they found some unexpected reliability issues that did not show up in the dyno, even if those issues are.. well... enormous. What I do not believe is that the engine is proving to be underpowered. I mean, they must exactly know engine's power from their dyno tests. Unless he means that they will solve unreliability by heavily detuning, but that is not what I understand from Hasegawa sacho's words.
Well if the contract and project of Mclaren-Honda is 10 years and they spend 5 years to get right the engine (something Honda said from the beginning) and they have the change of wining the other 5 years as constructors I don't think it would be so bad outcome. The problem is Alonso, everyone wants him to win before retires but the project so far I don't see it as disaster or catastrophic yet. So let's see how they develop the engine this year without tokens and see if that chasis is as good they state.alexa wrote:Looks like this year will be year for testing 2018 PU , and since McLaren doesn't have extra 100-150 mil € to pay engines of some other manufacture it's doomed to stay with Honda.
Honda promised ALO that they was going to have a top engine in 2017. Also, Honda wanted ALO, they paid (and still paying) ALO and they support ALO. The problem is not ALO, the problem is McLaren Honda, chassis and engine.Redragon wrote:alexa wrote: The problem is Alonso, everyone wants him to win before retires but the project so far I don't see it as disaster or catastrophic yet. So let's see how they develop the engine this year without tokens and see if that chasis is as good they state.