First and best option is staying where he is and coming engine updates may give him something to decide. Second is Renault. If he leave, when we think his carier we can say mclaren is wc next year
First and best option is staying where he is and coming engine updates may give him something to decide. Second is Renault. If he leave, when we think his carier we can say mclaren is wc next year
One would assume that Honda would be open to outside help but the "outside help" may not be wanting to help Honda. I am sure they will get it right soon enough, especially now tokens are no more, Honda have huge resources and drive, so it'll be only a matter of time. Will Alonso leave too early, like he did with Ferrari, one has to wonder.
From China, it was ~10800 to ~12500 under full load. Haven't seen any onboards after that of the McLaren in qualifying.
Thanks Nuvolari!
What Merc and Ferrari are doing to put out so much power is totally unknown, but you can be sure it is not anywhere close to conventional.
They weren't limited with compressor sizing by design. Honda was. It also sounds like Honda greatly improved the weight and center of mass with the new unit. That has to have a knock on effect with the chassis performance Mclaren is touting.FW17 wrote: ↑05 May 2017, 15:17What Merc and Ferrari are doing to put out so much power is totally unknown, but you can be sure it is not anywhere close to conventional.
The reason they have been successful is because they have created a good baseline in 2014 and 2015 respectively had have been able to modify and improve one area at a time. Honda should have taken this approach, they felt it would take longer so have gone with revolutions than evolution.
OT alert....godlameroso wrote: ↑05 May 2017, 15:19From a purely semantic point of view, revolutions lead you right back where you started
It's me again.
No mention of injections, only 'sparks'...Technical Regulations Article 5.11.1 wrote:Ignition is only permitted by means of a single ignition coil and single spark plug per cylinder. No more than five sparks per cylinder per engine cycle are permitted.
The use of plasma, laser or other high frequency ignition techniques is forbidden.
Only approved ignition coils may be used and the list of parts approved by the FIA, and the approval procedure, may be found in the Appendix to the Technical Regulations.