That doesn't read to me it was a McLaren fault but rather their oil tank didn't work once it was in the car. It reads like another correlation issue between Sakura testing and track like Hasegawa spoke of previously in the year.HPD wrote: ↑10 Dec 2017, 15:04Of course.
I think Mclaren demanded a lot about packing.Hasegawa: "Then, at the Barcelona test, we found more issues on the car, such as the oil tank issue. It was a car-related issue. This is not a complete engine issue, but of course it is very important.”
http://en.hondaracingf1.com/newsroom/in ... pment.html
I'm also not convinced McLaren put any increased pressure on Honda for packaging for the first year of a new concept. They've literally just asked Renault for the conservative packaging so it would be odd to me if they show more caution for a race winning engine but demand tight packaging for one that was brand new from a supplier who were struggling badly and had 2 years of issues and failure behind it.
That is one giant leap of faith from McLaren that Honda could deliver. Surely you'd prioritise pre-season testing running for the first season of a major rule change and first year of a new engine concept, it's too important to risk getting bogged down with overheating engines for the 3rd pre-season in a row and risk limited running for me to believe it.


