I love your posts. Not constructive and just the same criticisms endlessly while conveniently leaving out fact.RedNEO wrote: ↑24 Jun 2017, 02:27Good point, it might be even less. I mean 10bhp is nothing to write home about when your miles away. That's barely a tenth of a second lolZakB wrote: ↑24 Jun 2017, 02:16Who says it's 10bhp?RedNEO wrote: ↑24 Jun 2017, 02:07
I can't say I'm surprised your excited since I've seen your previous posts. You said McLaren should wait to see Honda's big upgrade before they decide. After 6 months they deliver a 10bhp improvement. So let's say optimistic projection they manage to get another 10bhp by the end of the year. Then let's account to all the other teams improving there own engines by let's say another 10bhp this year. That means even if Mercedes stood still until the next engine formula Honda still wouldn't be able to match there engine from this year alone. We haven't even got into reliability and fuel consumption. But you go ahead and be excited I won't ruin your enthusiasm for Honda one day making a good engine but I'm just being realistic and McLaren sees it the same way that's why they are moving forwards with plan b.
Lets talk said facts and actually use our brains for a second.
No one has said 10hp. And if we ignore the tow speedtrap of 340+, Alonso hit 322.6km/h according to the FIA. Vandoorne hit 311.8..
That's an 11km/h difference between specs... That is far more than 10hp...
For more perspective. Hamilton was slower, Bottas was 1km/h faster and Vettel was 3km/h faster. For the chart, go to the power unit thread, page 629. There is definite progress and this will only get better with each time it's used and the mapping improved.
The reasoning the power unit is not being used for the rest of the GP is mainly and rather simply because they see it pointless to put mileage on it at a track where they'll be starting last due to penalties where it's difficult to overtake bar the straight, and honestly, they probably want to do a bit more map work as well. They need to ensure minimal penalties for the rest of the season. So why waste it here when it's still being set up. It's a shame we didn't get to see Alonso put in a proper timed lap as Hasegawa said, but next GP will be interesting.
I'm disappointed to see it won't be used this week and have to wait till the next race to really see their improvement, but I'm happy to see an improvement and at least both of them have the revised MGU-H so theoretically there shouldn't be a reason they can't both finish. And also seeing the amount of issues the other drivers had just staying on track. I'm expecting a pretty safety car heavy race. Who knows!