Or a Hartley foot on the loud peddle
Or a Hartley foot on the loud peddle
Hartley:
“I’m still pretty positive for Montreal,” he said.
“We have an engine update coming, and we had a new floor here so we had some performance to put on the car.
“It looks like the team is really starting to unlock the car’s potential.”
Pressed on Honda’s forthcoming update, he said: “I don’t know exact numbers, I think it’s better you ask someone from Honda or Toro Rosso.
“But I think it’s meant to be a sizeable step.”
Gasly:
"I'll wait until the Free 1 to see exactly what's the difference on the computer, I learned in Formula 1 that it's better to wait and see until you put something new, because sometimes it does not work as well as you expect. I can only go in the right direction, I am very excited about this improvement, I think we have taken a good step this weekend, Monaco is a special track, but I hope we can keep that pace in the next races. "
https://as.com/motor/2018/05/30/formula ... 20235.html
If the gains are substantial, then the extra power outweighs the grid drop. Canada has overtaking opportunities, so it's not impossible to get into the points, with a good strategy, luck and solid drive.rogazilla wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 13:59Exciting and nervous time. The fact they are replacing Hartley's PU says this is a testing season. Probably does not matter if they incur penalty as long as it is not reliability issue. Guess they want to demostrates the reliability which means they want to stick to the schedule as much as they can and introduce power upgrade when reliability is established. However, penalty is not part of the concern as long as they can show reliability.
The problem is that the 27 bhp figure is complete speculation and doesn’t come from Honda. It appears to be a refinement of a previous prediction of a 25-30 bhp gain but again with no sources. I’ve seen a Japanese journalist indicate that the number is merely the gap to Mercedes divided by two, therefore the gain needed by Honda with each update to catch up.Ground Effect wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 14:59It's been reported on motorsport.com that the a 27bhp bump is expected from the Honda upgrades, translating to 0.3secs. They also said Renault are expecting more modest gains.
Everybody need to hold their expectations about this upgrade, the full potential will not be reveal in Canada, maybe France or Austria, Honda will run on a "safe mode" this first race in order to validated dyno results and reliability parameters.
The thing is, sometimes the figures come from Honda, on an off record basis, or an insider who doesn't want to be quoted due to not being in a position to give said info. Sometimes they deliberately leak to the press what they want out there. It's a complex game of PR etc. But that said, it's not uncommon for journalists to just do guess work and fill in the gaps when they're not getting info.Talisman wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 15:41The problem is that the 27 bhp figure is complete speculation and doesn’t come from Honda. It appears to be a refinement of a previous prediction of a 25-30 bhp gain but again with no sources. I’ve seen a Japanese journalist indicate that the number is merely the gap to Mercedes divided by two, therefore the gain needed by Honda with each update to catch up.Ground Effect wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 14:59It's been reported on motorsport.com that the a 27bhp bump is expected from the Honda upgrades, translating to 0.3secs. They also said Renault are expecting more modest gains.
I highly doubt Autosport does that, they know what's going on in the paddock because they are actually there.Ground Effect wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 16:17The thing is, sometimes the figures come from Honda, on an off record basis, or an insider who doesn't want to be quoted due to not being in a position to give said info. Sometimes they deliberately leak to the press what they want out there. It's a complex game of PR etc. But that said, it's not uncommon for journalists to just do guess work and fill in the gaps when they're not getting info.Talisman wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 15:41The problem is that the 27 bhp figure is complete speculation and doesn’t come from Honda. It appears to be a refinement of a previous prediction of a 25-30 bhp gain but again with no sources. I’ve seen a Japanese journalist indicate that the number is merely the gap to Mercedes divided by two, therefore the gain needed by Honda with each update to catch up.Ground Effect wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 14:59It's been reported on motorsport.com that the a 27bhp bump is expected from the Honda upgrades, translating to 0.3secs. They also said Renault are expecting more modest gains.
Autosport are as clueless as anyone about Honda.RonDennis wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 16:40I highly doubt Autosport does that, they know what's going on in the paddock because they are actually there.Ground Effect wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 16:17The thing is, sometimes the figures come from Honda, on an off record basis, or an insider who doesn't want to be quoted due to not being in a position to give said info. Sometimes they deliberately leak to the press what they want out there. It's a complex game of PR etc. But that said, it's not uncommon for journalists to just do guess work and fill in the gaps when they're not getting info.Talisman wrote: ↑30 May 2018, 15:41
The problem is that the 27 bhp figure is complete speculation and doesn’t come from Honda. It appears to be a refinement of a previous prediction of a 25-30 bhp gain but again with no sources. I’ve seen a Japanese journalist indicate that the number is merely the gap to Mercedes divided by two, therefore the gain needed by Honda with each update to catch up.