Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
They are a huge company with massive resources but they are using f1 as a test bed
Can you elaborate and explain what "using f1 as a test bed" exactly and specifically is?
Honda is doing F1 to do and win F1 by themselves, to let none other than Honda engineers do F1. Completely same as any other makers. Ferrari is doing F1 in order to do F1 by Ferrari and let Ferrari engineers do F1. Not only that, doing F1 has huge implication and incentive for them in attracting talents from all over Italy etc and maintaining and polishing its brand. So they have to do F1 by themselves and in Italy. Renault is the same, Honda is the same. Or is that surprise to you? Mercedes is exception because they are effectively British.
Almost all current Honda staffs in both garage and factory used to work on F1 previously in 00s for long sustained period, not like apprentice as trial for short period only to be moved to different sections after one or few years. Cyril Abiteboul has shorter F1 career than Hasegawa and Tanabe and many of Honda's current garage staffs. Speaking of Abiteboul, he was recently boasting that Renault is bringing its young talent to F1 aggressively and their F1 operation is young and fresh. Also Renault is conducting engineering academy in F1. Go figure. Of course Honda is doing the same, letting talented youngsters work on trivial stuffs is total waste of time and talent, it's best to give him/her appropriate assignment from get-go (the likes of Newey, Lowe and Key used to be freshman as everyone has their own first year but they were never assigned to do choirs like paper work, right?). Otherwise their F1 operation will be full of old people nearing retirement. Only in this way organizations can maintain competitiveness and sustainability. Are Renault and Ferrari full of old staff? No. Honda is not doing anything special. Soichiro Honda saw F1 and got impressed with the competitive condition where everything is done so fast and harsh, an environment only motorsports esp F1 offer. "All those European car makers are and have been doing this F1 and that's why they can build such good commercial cars, so we've got to do it too". Understand? That's the context and meaning. So they are merely copying what Westerns do. Actually it's funny that even quite a few Japanese say this (Honda do F1 as training blah blah). What's common is that they are not thinking or actually trying to learn anything, just repeating what they heard somewhere. Thing is that Soichiro Honda got hyper excited about F1's aforementioned fast and harsh competition environment and talked and wrote a lot about it. Then it's taken out of context and abused. Something like that tends to be picked up alot and repeated like mantra (same as Ferrari's "aero is for those who cannot build engine", "six tenths" for Alonso, etc, all makers all drivers all countries have such). So this "Honda use F1 as staff training or test bed" cliche is false, nothing but a myth. You just dont know it, merely echoing what those media and others are saying without perspective. Your post is a template of those "Honda criticisms". The framework of "Honda use F1 as training ground / refuse outsiders (specifically Western) / etc -> they need to poach (Western) engineers from rival makers" is the same, narrative/expansion based on the denominator is uniform, there is no originality, everything is just downgraded carbon copy of stereotype, prejudice and categorization.
The problem of Honda has always been that their F1 operation had been intermittent. So guys like Hasegawa, Tanabe, Nakamura (chief engineer), Nakano (chief mechanic since 2015, or effectively 2013) etc who had all been involved since around 2000 to the end of 2008 (Hasegawa used to work for Honda indy engine in late 90s with Arai before F1, Nakamura has been involved with F1 since Mugen era, Tanabe was Berger engineer in early 90s before 00s), as well as all the other F1 engineers, had to be relocated to different sections within the company after 2008 (and 1992 as well in previous case).
Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
and it is reflected in their record since their return.
So, no, it's just lazy correlation, just easy and convenient to look at it that way.
Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
There is only so many times you can give excuses.
No one is.
Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
Fourth year since their return
Or just short of full 5 years since they ever started working on the development plus starting up everything (operation and facilities) in May 2013. Others have been doing it since 2010 or even before, so more than 8 years now.
Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
and the pattern of failures is the same. MGU-H bearing issues caused by mainly heat and oil seepage have been plaguing them since time immemorial but they have failed to get on top of those despite a 100 counter measures, the words they love to use .
No, current persisting MGU-H issue is new one from 2017. They did not have this particular MGU-H issue in 2015 and 2016 (of course it broke some times but not as often and the cause is totally different so just isolated cases).
And it is not caused by heat. Heat is a consequence. Also it is not oil seepage. It's oil infiltration. Oil mist enters compressor and then the oil goes into MGU-H, invades in its bearing, gets burned by rotational friction to cause damage. That's attributed to unconventional oil tank that's due to compressor placed at the front of ICE, as well as elongated shaft due to turbo moved outside V. That's last year's, this year's could well be the same persisting issue, could well be different.
"100 counter measures"?, so? They always explained such and such is what happened and such and such seem to be the cause and they applied patches that's possible for the moment. I have no idea what you are unhappy with about it. What and how should they say then, or more like you got the what and how wrong it seems?
Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
Honda need to divert more resources and try and poach engineers from rivals to fast track their learning because without 100 percent commitment in terms of resources and personnel they will struggle.
Well at least Honda hired a Merc engineer from 2013 (introduced at Honda official site), and would you think he's the only one? And half of Honda garage staff are Brits or Europeans (introduced at Honda twitter and explained in documentary and books), and you'd think that's it? Putting "staff wanted for F1" in both Japan and UK continuously, and would you think they are not using those behind-the-door services and channels for high professionals (both in Japan and UK/etc)? Did you ever know these in the first place?
Besides, so, exactly who of those "engineers of rivals" in UK or France or Italy want to work at Sakura Japan or MK in UK? Perhaps the type of engineers Honda would need are satisfied with working at Brixworth or Viry (or wherever Renault's engine division is located) or Maranello (or wherever Ferrari's engine division is located) so not want to go to and work at Sakura (and MK, but full blown R&D is done at Sakura) even for double salary. It's annoying that some people regard human resource as if it's a tradeable object. They are human who have family, house etc. When, for example, even most of Enstone staffs are fixed to Enstone and not anywhere else even inside UK (those high profile guys can move rather freely only because they get paid huge and can afford to do so), how can poaching "engineers of rivals" be so easy for Honda? So Renault poached Merc's and Ferrari's PU engineers? and how many? Ferrari poached Renault's and Merc's engineers?, and how many? Merc poached Renault's and Ferrari's? how many?, for sure you know and can tell, right? Also annoying is lack of respect. Honda F1 is by, of and for Honda and Japan, not UK. Just like Renault F1 is by, of and for Renault and French, Ferrari is by, of and for Ferrari and Italy. Merc is different case, being effectively pure British. So please respect Honda and Japan and just let us do.
They took lots and lots of fast track in the first place, that's why their Energy Store was McLaren, some PU components like inlet/intake was McLaren, they counted on McLaren for various methodologies on F1, they were relying on McLaren and many European suppliers for key components, they hired Gilles Simon from the very start, they rely too much on outside vendors both in Japan and Europe and McLaren to the extent that they must increase in-house capacity urgently, and so on. It's just that you don't know these. What more can they do? Do more than that and it will not be "Honda F1". Is it really too hard for you to imagine that Honda too has very basic corporate and national pride in F1, has cause and reason for themselves in doing F1, just like Ferrari has and Renault has? Fact of the matter is, Honda, having so many non-Japanese staff already, sought as much fast-track as possible already and setting up factories in UK as well to hire engineers there, is significantly less domestic/national and inter-corporate than Ferrari (Italy/Ferrari), Renault (France/Renault) and Merc (effectively Great Britain / Brixworth).
And Honda do have 100 percent commitment, so don't bother. It's just that it's not the way you want, or they had already been doing the kind of things you want them to do, or much much more than that, for long time or since the very beginning, but you just didn't know it.
They will struggle of course because aforementioned lack of time and being in a position to play catch up, but I'd rather want them keep failing than seeking help in rivals engineers, or, say, buying out Cosworth or building huge R&D in UK to hire loads of Brixworth staff or Britons and success. Borrowed success = worthless. Struggle, strive and failure on their own = priceless. Again, as wrote above, Honda is significantly less domestic/national and inter-company than Ferrari and Renault (and Brixworth as UK) already, so the rest, just let them do.
Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
Without ERS efficiency they will struggle in races a phenomenon Mclaren suffered in races in the last three years.
They did not have deployment issue in 2016 (what they always suffered was lack of ICE power). In 2017 they suffered in deployment shortage initially due to wider faster car and immature harvesting control but it's got improved significantly since Monza if not totally on par let alone sperior than others.
Chicane wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:40
Toro Rosso have given Honda full freedom in terms of installation, space and cooling yet if they have reliability issues in the very first race it is a big hit. Remember in these power units once MGU-H fails the turbo also fails. This is going to be a really challenging season for Toro Rosso and i hope Honda manage to turn this around but i waited for three years in blind hope it never happened. Hopefully Toro Rosso are more lucky.
One thing is certain Red Bull main team aren't going to be anywhere near Honda in their current state.
Of course this is nothing but massive blow to whole Honda, as none other than Tanabe told to Japanese media. They have suffered from this MGU-H issue throughout the whole 2017 season and gradually getting on top of it towards the end of the season, and focused on the reliability extensively esp MGU-H during winter for this year, only to fail as early as on lap 14 altho cause may well be different.
Irrespective of the MGU-H issue, RBR Honda was never going to happen in the first place, at least in near future. You cannot simply tell anything about how Honda will do 2019 onward by this coming May or even summer, no one will make such gamble, almost suicidal. Red Bull giving Toro Rosso to Honda is about having more options in mid-long term for themselves and increasing political power in F1 (bonus being that they dont need to pay for PU for STR and can give the STR technical team whole new engineering environment of being manufacturer's works).