F1 has had fewer engine suppliers than this before but they have almost always had a non-works "independent" supplier which is the most crucial thing missing today
Macklaren wrote:F1 has had fewer engine suppliers than this before but they have almost always had a non-works "independent" supplier which is the most crucial thing missing today
Yeah. There's no such thing as a dark horse in F1 anymore. Brawn GP was the last. Let's hope that the Honda engine stays in F1Macklaren wrote:
F1 has had fewer engine suppliers than this before but they have almost always had a non-works "independent" supplier which is the most crucial thing missingp today
Turn 5, twice !?http://f1sokuho.mopita.com/pc/free/inde ... 2851&tt=-1
http://members.f1-life.net/race/58118/
·The MGU-K shaft broken in qualifying session,but it could be changed without penalty.
·Honda asked FIA if they could change it throughout the night,but FIA refused.It needs 5 hours to change the shaft when its sunday,so they made a hard decision to change the Power Unit(hasegawa).
·Stoffel suffered an engine issue again in the race.The issue is still under investigation.But from the data,it seems like the MGU-K issue happend again(hasegawa).
·If its the shaft,it means the MGU-K can stil be used in the following races.
·Turn 5.Its the same place when the MGU-K shaft brokend.So its suspected that when the car bumped in the curbs,then some torsion came to the Power Unit(hasegawa).
·The 2 MGU-K issue are both happend in Stoffel's Power Unit.Alonso didnt have the problem.So its naturely to think if some parts from a specific lot number is not good.
·Anyway,it would not effected the fact Stoffel suffered the MGU-K 2 times this weekend.
·Stoffel started from 18th postion,and he went to 10th before he retired.His race pace is very good.Felt very very sorry for Stoffel.Alonso suffered a gearbox issue,he was in trouble when shift up.The team retired the car to provent a possilbe damage to the gearbox(hasegawa).
If it was the shaft that failed, would they not have designed the shaft with some sort of adequate safety factor integrated into it especially if it’s going to experience extensive torsion. I know a greater safety factor means a greater mass and this is F1 after all but to finish first, first you must finish.bigblue wrote: ↑04 Sep 2017, 15:46As someone suggested previously, the "2017 McLaren F1 Team - Honda" thread may be the best place to discuss and debate all the "team" news ?
viewtopic.php?f=15&t=25527
The only recent engine news I've seen was via user hasika on the autosport forum
http://forums.autosport.com/topic/20652 ... try8086285
Turn 5, twice !?http://f1sokuho.mopita.com/pc/free/inde ... 2851&tt=-1
http://members.f1-life.net/race/58118/
·The MGU-K shaft broken in qualifying session,but it could be changed without penalty.
·Honda asked FIA if they could change it throughout the night,but FIA refused.It needs 5 hours to change the shaft when its sunday,so they made a hard decision to change the Power Unit(hasegawa).
·Stoffel suffered an engine issue again in the race.The issue is still under investigation.But from the data,it seems like the MGU-K issue happend again(hasegawa).
·If its the shaft,it means the MGU-K can stil be used in the following races.
·Turn 5.Its the same place when the MGU-K shaft brokend.So its suspected that when the car bumped in the curbs,then some torsion came to the Power Unit(hasegawa).
·The 2 MGU-K issue are both happend in Stoffel's Power Unit.Alonso didnt have the problem.So its naturely to think if some parts from a specific lot number is not good.
·Anyway,it would not effected the fact Stoffel suffered the MGU-K 2 times this weekend.
·Stoffel started from 18th postion,and he went to 10th before he retired.His race pace is very good.Felt very very sorry for Stoffel.Alonso suffered a gearbox issue,he was in trouble when shift up.The team retired the car to provent a possilbe damage to the gearbox(hasegawa).
i hope it will be Williams-Honda or Redbull-Hondagodlameroso wrote: ↑04 Sep 2017, 14:33Honda leaving would be bad, not just for the sport, but for McLaren as well. I hope we see McLaren Honda in 2018 as well. When people see them doing 1:18's in testing next year no one will complain, well maybe the competition.

i think its safe to say the current PU is a prototype for what will Honda offer later on.. heavier 4 kg with ironing the bugs and releasing more power i can see it realy surpassing Renault and the picture is getting more clearer now..Wazari wrote: ↑04 Sep 2017, 20:05Well, there is a new "Spec 4" that is "less meddled" built and being tested. I am biased but I think it is a more robust, efficient PU with only a slight weight disadvantage. With all this supposed turmoil, who knows when or if we will see it this year. The overall architecture is not that different from the current spec PU and the "delays" have already occurred so I don't think it will be another "clean slate" scenario like it was from 2016 to 2017
McLaren can compete with the top guys, which is exactly the reason why Ferrari and Mercedes aren't willing to provide them with engines. Stop acting like Red Bull are the gods of F1, because their car was a --- stain at testing as well. The data from McLaren suggests they are capable of battling with Red Bull and that's why they are going to switch to Renault. People need to stop underestimating McLaren.Goosey wrote: ↑04 Sep 2017, 23:43Do McLaren honestly believe that they can beat Red Bull with the same power unit? I'm sorry, but this most probably isn't going to happen.
With Renault they can be third or fourth fastest team and never be world champions.
Stick with Honda and they have works status and the potential to become world champions. Have Toro Rossi as a development team / partner and create something great.
If Alonso doesn't like it, tell him to go to Williams and win !
Plenty of other fast young drivers like Sainz, Verstappen etc.
I would imagine that somekind of dynamic dyno, with a complete rear end on the car (ice, GB, wheels on a rolling road, rear suspension and loads) isn’t too hard to build and program. Some clever engineers would have that running in weeks.Mudflap wrote: ↑04 Sep 2017, 19:52To me this sounds like they have not fixed their torsional vibration issues from earlier in the season.
I don't think Alonso's gearbox problems and SVD's quill shaft failures are unrelated.
On aggressive downshifts there is a big driveline acceleration spike as the engine is spun up. The MGUK is spinning 3 times faster than the crank hence it's effective inertia is over 10 times its actual inertia. Torque is inertia times the massive angular acceleration - all this taken on a very small diameter of a quill shaft. And then there is the torque of the harvesting MGUK too but I suspect this is nothing compared to the dynamic torque.
Similarly, on harsh upshifts, the torque caused by the inertia sync between engine and gearbox eventually finds its way into the MGUK shaft.
2x broken shafts and one rough gearbox hardly look like a coincidence even though they were on different cars.
Edit: As a side note I've been told that no current transient dyno can properly simulate the shift torque spike in an F1 engine.
Friction refers to the MGU-H, with the long shaft, mostly?GhostF1 wrote: ↑05 Sep 2017, 02:02Zak was pretty honest in his interview, as usual, with Brundle and that.
He said they know what the issues with the Honda PU are and there is a couple of them, but they are consistent, there isn't issues scattered all over it, he also believes they can get on top of it but it's a timing thing now, whether they believe they can get it right quickly or not.
He also mentioned something I hadn't heard before... In response to the the question of what the main issue is with the PU:
"It's friction, there's a lot of friction in the engine and as we know, friction is not what you want, that's costing us power, but they are trying very hard to get that sorted and they have developments in the pipeline so we will have to see what they have come up with and take a decision from there".
Interesting point. That's likely the root cause of the vibration issues. If Spec 4 delivers new pistons, CC, heads whatever other internal changes are rumoured, that really could lift their game. Gut feeling here, but I think Spec 4 could rear it's head in Malaysia, ahead of a hopefully stronger showing in Japan (an important home race for Honda and their pride) than last year.