When it boils down to it, it's their 2017 design MGU-H that has caused all these issues. They've either detonated or just completely locked up. Causing endless stoppages, no battery power and it's becoming more obvious it is cast as one with the turbo so it's failure directly affects that also.drunkf1fan wrote: ↑28 Jun 2017, 03:08I can't take this altogether seriously, part you cut out said, it's under powered and fuel heavy.... but then he says it's a known good engine in the paddock and it could be right up there when working. Sorry but this is nonsense. I can't believe an engine that lacks power and uses more fuel to produce less power is considered good. By the time it produces more power and uses less fuel to do it.... it will be a different engine basically. This engine is not good, because as he also says, it has a tendency to commit suicide. Down on power, unreliable and very inefficient any of which alone would make it uncompetitive but all three together, considering it a good engine is insane to me.HPD wrote: ↑28 Jun 2017, 00:59So the question.. Why is the Honda engine so bad?
Well lets again start with perhaps why it isn’t, we also know that the Honda engine in the paddock is classed as a GOOD engine (that’s right) and when it is fully developed it is likely to be a match for Merc and Ferrari. Sauber might not be so daft..
Engine tokens are ditched this year but this change needs real miles. Track time is non existent, and dynos are almost useless past producing a base map.
#SteveBarbyF1
https://thejudge13.com/2017/06/27/why-a ... explained/
Then the latter, Merc have brought new engines, specifically new combustion chambers along with brand new fuel mix to the track and it work well straight away. His assertion that dyno testing is useless beyond basic maps is simply incorrect or Merc wouldn't have turned up to the first test each season with an exceptionally reliable and fantastically working engine. A bad dyno without the ability to mimic air pressure at different tracks and mimic changing air pressure/gusting wind, is a bad dyno considering what is required. A good dyno is provably very useful in testing an entire engine nearly to exhaustion as Ferrari and Mercedes have proven over the past three and a bit seasons. Track time is still huge, every weekend counts as track time, but again, it's proven that this isn't required to make a very very good engine. Can they be tweaked further from feedback from track testing, I'm sure, but Merc were lets say 98% of the way there when those engines turn up at the first test of the season.
It reads like an excuse, it is a good engine but lack of track testing is holding them back, with only more track testing they can turn this obviously great engine into what it should be. Reality check, this engine kinda sucks, if it's ever competitive there won't be many parts that are the same as in the current engine.
They added what they believe to be the countermeasure now as of Baku, so it's possible we have seen the end of the terrible reliability issues. That could be called wishful thinking in light of what's been going on, yes, but it's also an entirely possible scenario and if we are talking facts here, none of us can really comment until a few more races have taken place and they've both finished.
My assumption.. The new engine to be used in Austria will give a decent step forward, the only real information we have performance wise is Hasegawa quoting "we don't usually release figures but the upgrade brings more than two or three tenths" (his exact wording), that's literally the only non speculative statement in reference to the upgrade around.
I admit that each race, for the last bunch of GP's anyway, every time a yellow flag comes up on screen, I immediately assume it's a McLaren because there hasn't been any real hardware changes to the PU so its been a coin toss. But now, Baku was a double finish while debuting a new MGU-H design and with an updated spec ready to go for the next, I have genuine interest to see how it goes