The issue I have with Gasly's comments is describing the car as "mega" and saying all the performance deficit is from the engine. I know it still has a a long way to go, the engine, but that car is not mega. This is out of the Red Bull (and Mclaren) playbook, praise the car, blame the engine. Little sparks have been known to start great fires.Sayeman wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 08:51Honda PU seems to be decent in start-stop circuits, like they looked in Canada. But in places where you have to be on throttle 80% of the time, the PU struggles. It's not only Honda, Renault also loosing around 1 sec on the straight. Even Mercedes is struggling against Ferrari. Considering Renault been developing the PU far longer than Honda, Honda can be pleased with the progress. It would have been even faster if Mclaren didn't restrict them from supplying to other teams in the last 3 years.
According to Rosberg - ""[Ferrari] managing to put more pressure into the engine via the turbo... because of all that extra pressure, they're manage to re-charge more of the battery...so they have like free battery charge... so they're able to deploy it every lap all the way round".
I hope Honda takes notice and does something similar.
Talking about Gasly's comments, I think criticising him isn't fair. We know the PU is still not there, When you are stuck behind slower cars for 20+ laps, not been able to make a pass even with DRS, it gets very frustrating. And He isn't lying about the deficit, not claiming they have a grid beating chassis either. So, lets hope this spurs on the Honda development.
Ground Effect wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 09:03The issue I have with Gasly's comments is describing the car as "mega" and saying all the performance deficit is from the engine. I know it still has a a long way to go, the engine, but that car is not mega. This is out of the Red Bull (and Mclaren) playbook, praise the car, blame the engine. Little sparks have been known to start great fires.Sayeman wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 08:51Honda PU seems to be decent in start-stop circuits, like they looked in Canada. But in places where you have to be on throttle 80% of the time, the PU struggles. It's not only Honda, Renault also loosing around 1 sec on the straight. Even Mercedes is struggling against Ferrari. Considering Renault been developing the PU far longer than Honda, Honda can be pleased with the progress. It would have been even faster if Mclaren didn't restrict them from supplying to other teams in the last 3 years.
According to Rosberg - ""[Ferrari] managing to put more pressure into the engine via the turbo... because of all that extra pressure, they're manage to re-charge more of the battery...so they have like free battery charge... so they're able to deploy it every lap all the way round".
I hope Honda takes notice and does something similar.
Talking about Gasly's comments, I think criticising him isn't fair. We know the PU is still not there, When you are stuck behind slower cars for 20+ laps, not been able to make a pass even with DRS, it gets very frustrating. And He isn't lying about the deficit, not claiming they have a grid beating chassis either. So, lets hope this spurs on the Honda development.
Sayeman wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 08:51
Talking about Gasly's comments, I think criticising him isn't fair. We know the PU is still not there, When you are stuck behind slower cars for 20+ laps, not been able to make a pass even with DRS, it gets very frustrating. And He isn't lying about the deficit, not claiming they have a grid beating chassis either. So, lets hope this spurs on the Honda development.
"Motorsport-Total - Die Erwartungen waren große, der Unterschied sichtbar - aber der Umschwung blieb aus. Toro Rosso hat seit dem Österreich-Grand-Prix tief in die Update-Kiste gegriffen. Die Auswirkungen sind gleich null. Dementsprechend groß ist der Frust bei Piere Gasly und Brendon Hartley.
"Die anderen warten nicht auf uns", schlägt Gasly Alarm. "Jeder verbessert sich aber wir tappen auf der Stelle. Die ganzen Updates, die uns hätten helfen sollen, haben uns keinen Fortschritt gebracht."
Well, I'm playing devil's advocate here, so bear with me. If we see how it started, he complained about the car and updates not working and even used the word confused at one point. That was after free practice, (FP1 I believe) but after qualifying, it's all from the engine. Like I said playing devil's advocate, so only speculating, but I wouldn't be surprised if he was instructed by Red Bull bosses/Toro Rosso to refrain from critisizing the car. If there are any complaints he should link it to the engine. Maybe he went a little overboard with that. It's one thing to say we're still behind or still down on power, than to say, the car is mega or it's all from the engine. Like I said, Red Bull playbook.Wouter wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 09:53Gasly was a little frustrated, I think. In one interview the car was MEGA and in another interview he said that the car had had updates that did not work and the car was bad to drive. Then he blamed the car and not the engine.
"Motorsport-Total - Die Erwartungen waren große, der Unterschied sichtbar - aber der Umschwung blieb aus. Toro Rosso hat seit dem Österreich-Grand-Prix tief in die Update-Kiste gegriffen. Die Auswirkungen sind gleich null. Dementsprechend groß ist der Frust bei Piere Gasly und Brendon Hartley.
"Die anderen warten nicht auf uns", schlägt Gasly Alarm. "Jeder verbessert sich aber wir tappen auf der Stelle. Die ganzen Updates, die uns hätten helfen sollen, haben uns keinen Fortschritt gebracht."
Or the full interview hereGround Effect wrote: ↑11 Jul 2018, 13:08A much more reasonable take from James Key
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/toro ... m-1058620/
Not just an experienced driver, not a driver close to Gasly, or even a driver consistently half a second behind Gasley.