Yeah buts It's not about Honda v people on forums though. It's about Honda v Mercedes Ferrari and Renault and seeing how they operate compared to the best.gofast182 wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 19:15It's funny, not as much on this site but elsewhere on the net, to see people savage Honda for the single cylinder model as if they're smarter and could've done it better from the start: they are not and they could not have. Anyone who works in a field where R&D is done and the final assembly/product has multiple repeated structures/elements in it understands that you almost always do proof-of-concept on 'subset models' for the benefits of turnaround time, ease of analysis, and cost as you do iterative development. In most cases, a lot can be gleaned from these 'subset models' but in some cases, they do not translate to scale assembly, which is what Honda has found in this instance. Honda has learned and has moved on. Were they silly for attempting to develop this way in the first place? No, and anyone who thinks they are does not know as much as they think they do.
Surree...Mudflap wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 21:37Single cylinder development is the correct way to test combustion concepts - the real mistake was failing to predict behaviour in a multi cylinder configuration.
The physics are all well understood and I am struggling to understand where honda have gone wrong.
Saying that single cylinder work is a dead end is a bit like saying wind tunnel and CFD are useless. Sure some teams sometimes mess up their CFD models or use a rubbish wind tunnel (see caterham) and predicted improvents do not translate into on-track gains but the error is not in the method.
My comment was about the pundits but yes, I certainly understand that. As it relates to competition, consider that they introduced a new engine concept this year and they've corrected paths on how they prove out developments. On balance, they had more scope to improve in the first place but the impressive development pace thus far (and what we understand to be coming) stands on merit. We'll know soon where that effort puts them in relation to their rivals.RedNEO wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 20:19Yeah buts It's not about Honda v people on forums though. It's about Honda v Mercedes Ferrari and Renault and seeing how they operate compared to the best.gofast182 wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 19:15It's funny, not as much on this site but elsewhere on the net, to see people savage Honda for the single cylinder model as if they're smarter and could've done it better from the start: they are not and they could not have. Anyone who works in a field where R&D is done and the final assembly/product has multiple repeated structures/elements in it understands that you almost always do proof-of-concept on 'subset models' for the benefits of turnaround time, ease of analysis, and cost as you do iterative development. In most cases, a lot can be gleaned from these 'subset models' but in some cases, they do not translate to scale assembly, which is what Honda has found in this instance. Honda has learned and has moved on. Were they silly for attempting to develop this way in the first place? No, and anyone who thinks they are does not know as much as they think they do.
And overall in the last three years it's been solidly mediocre.
They did not get it horribly wrong - they were just not as good as Merc.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 21:39Surree...Mudflap wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 21:37Single cylinder development is the correct way to test combustion concepts - the real mistake was failing to predict behaviour in a multi cylinder configuration.
The physics are all well understood and I am struggling to understand where honda have gone wrong.
Saying that single cylinder work is a dead end is a bit like saying wind tunnel and CFD are useless. Sure some teams sometimes mess up their CFD models or use a rubbish wind tunnel (see caterham) and predicted improvents do not translate into on-track gains but the error is not in the method.
Put it into perspective. Ferrari and Renault got it horribly wrong from the start as well, and they had three years to develop.
Ok but Honda have yet to bring a significant update that's actually closed the gap significantly. Something Ferrari and Renault have managed to do under the token system impressively. Over the last three years I've been waiting to see that update that produced that same big jump in performance like Ferrari and Renault to really show they were making headway.gofast182 wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 21:55My comment was about the pundits but yes, I certainly understand that. As it relates to competition, consider that they introduced a new engine concept this year and they've corrected paths on how they prove out developments. On balance, they had more scope to improve in the first place but the impressive development pace thus far (and what we understand to be coming) stands on merit. We'll know soon where that effort puts them in relation to their rivals.RedNEO wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 20:19Yeah buts It's not about Honda v people on forums though. It's about Honda v Mercedes Ferrari and Renault and seeing how they operate compared to the best.gofast182 wrote: ↑22 Aug 2017, 19:15It's funny, not as much on this site but elsewhere on the net, to see people savage Honda for the single cylinder model as if they're smarter and could've done it better from the start: they are not and they could not have. Anyone who works in a field where R&D is done and the final assembly/product has multiple repeated structures/elements in it understands that you almost always do proof-of-concept on 'subset models' for the benefits of turnaround time, ease of analysis, and cost as you do iterative development. In most cases, a lot can be gleaned from these 'subset models' but in some cases, they do not translate to scale assembly, which is what Honda has found in this instance. Honda has learned and has moved on. Were they silly for attempting to develop this way in the first place? No, and anyone who thinks they are does not know as much as they think they do.
And overall in the last three years it's been solidly mediocre.
Honestly, the whole Illmor fascination seems trite. The media likes to push this cult-of-personality narrative, the expert may change (Simon -> Illmor) but the story stays the same. IMO Honda had a process problem to get their develop/model/test/verify cycle sorted, which handicapped them this year. All is well now.ZakB wrote: ↑23 Aug 2017, 10:56As expected, Illmor is working with Honda.
McLaren faces engine dilemma as Honda gets Ilmor boost
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/mcla ... st-943641/
There still remains a chance, however, that Toro Rosso could yet free up a supply by making a switch to Honda for 2018 – with the Italian team’s discussions with the Japanese manufacturer understood to not be totally over.