The Monaco or Canada is purely an assumption of the author. I always look at the actual quotes. Making sensationalistic and baseless assumptions is what media publications do these days.GoranF1 wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 13:01As article from a few days quotes Hasegawa saying they will test engine in BAH test and if good introduced it in Russia.Chicane wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 12:34When asked by Motorsport.com about the progress in curing the vibration issues, Hasegawa said: βI donβt think the drivers agree, but I think we have improved [the situation] since the beginning of the season.
βWe improved gradually but it is still not completely solved of course. So with the next update I would like to solve clearly.β
When asked to firm up the time frame of the upgraded engine, Hasegawa said: βWe cannot tell you an exact date but here or at any grand prix. If we have the chance, we would like to update our engines.β
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/hond ... es-893162/
Now this saying no new engine until Monaco or Canada.
Who should we trust?
A race is longer than an hour... how much more proof do you need?I have seen absolutely no evidence for the bolded portion above.
It is not semantics, instantaneous fuel flow rate/usage remains constant, that is the best way to evaluate these engines.
Teams rarely reveal their update schedules. We should not expect Honda to it either.Chicane wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 13:54
The Monaco or Canada is purely an assumption of the author. I always look at the actual quotes. Making sensationalistic and baseless assumptions is what media publications do these days.
Going by his actual quotes Hasegawa is clearly not committing to giving a date for the introduction of the upgraded power unit.
This is what he said when asked about the time frame of the upgraded engine.
βWe cannot tell you an exact date but here or at any grand prix. If we have the chance, we would like to update our engines.β.
I'm guessing the F1 journalists are expecting Honda to follow the usual upgrade pattern that you see during a season from other manufacturers/teams. I'd expect Honda will bring updates and tweaks to the track as and when they are ready. As for the big upgrades ? I'd want to have them ready to test on track in the first in season test. Sure Honda might get some bad headlines if things don't go as planned. But the data gathered will likely be worth it in the long run.godlameroso wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 14:41Well they have to introduce something for Barcelona, but may just be a stop gap measure that doesn't yield a significant improvement. Silverstone would be the next update, then Spa at the earliest, but likely around Singapore for final upgrade. Who knows how these things can turn out however. It may be sooner that we see them finally unlocking the potential in the power unit. You never know the engineers may have a eureka moment sooner, until then it'll be a slow iterative process.
Proof of what? Yes the races are longer than an hour, they also don't use the throttle for 100% of the race. Were you trying to make a salient point or just trying to be a wise ass?
Which was exactly my point. I was just quoting what he said. My issue was with media publications assuming a lot of thing to come up sensational headlines bypassing the actual quotes.PlatinumZealot wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 16:21Teams rarely reveal their update schedules. We should not expect Honda to it either.Chicane wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 13:54
The Monaco or Canada is purely an assumption of the author. I always look at the actual quotes. Making sensationalistic and baseless assumptions is what media publications do these days.
Going by his actual quotes Hasegawa is clearly not committing to giving a date for the introduction of the upgraded power unit.
This is what he said when asked about the time frame of the upgraded engine.
βWe cannot tell you an exact date but here or at any grand prix. If we have the chance, we would like to update our engines.β.
not sure the DW12 chassis can hold all of the ERS equipment. I suppose Honda would modify the chassis enough. Run it at like Twin Ring Motegi? Who would ever know?PlatinumZealot wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 13:33Wouldn't it be interesting if they used indy car for engine testing...
the cars would only run for an hour and 3 minutes.ENGINE TUNER wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 18:01Proof of what? Yes the races are longer than an hour, they also don't use the throttle for 100% of the race. Were you trying to make a salient point or just trying to be a wise ass?
Wouldn't be a bad idea. The current Indycar is proper HIGH DOWNFORCE open wheer. I was surprised to hear that current Indycars make f1 levels of downforce just a lower efficiency.PlatinumZealot wrote: β13 Apr 2017, 13:33Wouldn't it be interesting if they used indy car for engine testing...