Be careful on here mate. You will be labeled as a racist and heavily downvoted. Some people can feel insulted by such direct comments. You cannot say because they are Japanese. What you could say, is, it's because of the Japanese corporate and racing culture. This should be a fact, because Arai, Hasegawa and Wazari all said that. Long story short, they underestimated the current engine formula and somehow ignored all suggestions from the outside, because they wanted to do the things on their own.ZakB wrote: ↑31 Aug 2017, 18:21Why exactly? It's how they work.
One can see the same sort of thinking going on in Japan quite often and I would argue that this is actually the biggest problem that Honda faces in Formula 1. One simply cannot compete if one does not have the right kind of talent, and finding that sort of talent within one single nation is very difficult. Honda only seems to use Japanese people, and it has very few foreign research and development engineers. They are also operating in Japan, out of the main vortex of F1 development, and so new ideas take longer to filter through. This is a problem for all non-British teams (although there is a mini-cluster of expertise around Ferrari in Italy) because hiring in the right people is more difficult. This is why Scuderia Toro Rosso now seems to have 140 people (about a third of its staff) working in the UK.
And there is a pattern forming one cannot overlook. Honda and Toyota invested billions in the 2000's and what was the result? 1 (lucky) win from Button. Then theres Toyota in the WEC.
First big problem I see is the huge distance between chassis and engine(PU) development. PU, chassis and the transmission simply have to be developed (and produced) under 1 "roof".
Second big problem is or was the language barrier. At least for me it was very difficult to understand Arai. I somehow have to be very concentrated when I listen to Hasegawa to understand what he is saying.
Third big problem are the countless empty promises. I guess people are sick of hearing "rumors", not only now but also in the 2000's. It was the very same story.
And last the corporate culture. Thinking you can beat lets say Honeywell (in very short time) is utter nonsense. The company is developing turbine tech since 70 years. You simply can't make this up in a few years. Never ever. Same goes for electronics and so on.
So either they play the "dirty west capitalism" F1 game, buy their --- from the top supplyers and at least have a chance to win, or they "die" trying their own way. Sad as it is.
peace