Most powerful is debatable, in my opinion Mercedes may have had an small edge in that department… From a reliability stand point, I believe Honda was more reliable… The need for engine changes on their side was mostly due to collisions and not necessarily reliability related, while in Mercedes the additional units were driven by reliability improvements or concerns.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 22:10Ok big question. Which engine do you think was the most powerful and most reliable of them all? Is it Mercedes or Honda for you guys? Personally I still say Mercedes considering how Mclaren completed most amount of laps and having the same amount of engines changed as Red Bull. What do you think?
Should we not count Mclaren's performance with the Mercedes Engines? They were the most reliable on their back.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 22:39Most powerful is debatable, in my opinion Mercedes may have had an small edge in that department… From a reliability stand point, I believe Honda was more reliable… The need for engine changes on their side was mostly due to collisions and not necessarily reliability related, while in Mercedes the additional units were driven by reliability improvements or concerns.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 22:10Ok big question. Which engine do you think was the most powerful and most reliable of them all? Is it Mercedes or Honda for you guys? Personally I still say Mercedes considering how Mclaren completed most amount of laps and having the same amount of engines changed as Red Bull. What do you think?
It’s not just about Bottas, Williams and Aston Martin had to take additional engines, as did McLaren and those weren’t due to Mercedes testing things… Mercedes themselves admitted that they had reliability concerns.Emag wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 23:00The only reason why Mercedes appeared less reliable this year is because they absolutely wrecked Bottas' power units for experimentations which allowed them to find the right balance between risk/reward on Lewis' power units.
Even throughout 2021, Mercedes definitely was the king on both reliability and power. That can change in 2022, especially with Ferrari coming back into the picture, but given the history and track record Mercedes has had in the hybrid era, I would still put my money on them having the better overall package.
That isn’t the complete picture though, Mclaren had to introduce an additional engine due to reliability concerns in the last third of the season… While Honda had to introduce additional ones mainly due to the collisions suffered by both VER and PER.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 23:41Should we not count Mclaren's performance with the Mercedes Engines? They were the most reliable on their back.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 22:39Most powerful is debatable, in my opinion Mercedes may have had an small edge in that department… From a reliability stand point, I believe Honda was more reliable… The need for engine changes on their side was mostly due to collisions and not necessarily reliability related, while in Mercedes the additional units were driven by reliability improvements or concerns.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 22:10Ok big question. Which engine do you think was the most powerful and most reliable of them all? Is it Mercedes or Honda for you guys? Personally I still say Mercedes considering how Mclaren completed most amount of laps and having the same amount of engines changed as Red Bull. What do you think?
Mercedes may also have done the same with George Russell, his run of very (very) good qualifying performances seemed to end quite abruptly?Emag wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 23:00The only reason why Mercedes appeared less reliable this year is because they absolutely wrecked Bottas' power units for experimentations which allowed them to find the right balance between risk/reward on Lewis' power units.
Even throughout 2021, Mercedes definitely was the king on both reliability and power. That can change in 2022, especially with Ferrari coming back into the picture, but given the history and track record Mercedes has had in the hybrid era, I would still put my money on them having the better overall package.
Thought Gaskets are replaceable from race to race ...Stu wrote: ↑11 Jan 2022, 09:18Mercedes may also have done the same with George Russell, his run of very (very) good qualifying performances seemed to end quite abruptly?Emag wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 23:00The only reason why Mercedes appeared less reliable this year is because they absolutely wrecked Bottas' power units for experimentations which allowed them to find the right balance between risk/reward on Lewis' power units.
Even throughout 2021, Mercedes definitely was the king on both reliability and power. That can change in 2022, especially with Ferrari coming back into the picture, but given the history and track record Mercedes has had in the hybrid era, I would still put my money on them having the better overall package.
Some of McLaren’s late season drop in performance could also be attributed to them needing to turn down the engines to save costs (particularly once they knew that Ferrari were going to beat them - they became almost anonymous).
You also have the LH only (???), Brazil-spec engine with the ‘reliability upgrade’ very heavy gaskets (+630g) along with a turned-up-to-11 tune, when it was then used for the final two races it didn’t make the big difference that it did in Brazil.
In the first half of the season that was more true, but Merc later brought a new spec which was more durable then the previous iteration, at least in terms of engine wear which would likely have contributed to reliability.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑11 Jan 2022, 01:22It’s not just about Bottas, Williams and Aston Martin had to take additional engines, as did McLaren and those weren’t due to Mercedes testing things… Mercedes themselves admitted that they had reliability concerns.Emag wrote: ↑10 Jan 2022, 23:00The only reason why Mercedes appeared less reliable this year is because they absolutely wrecked Bottas' power units for experimentations which allowed them to find the right balance between risk/reward on Lewis' power units.
Even throughout 2021, Mercedes definitely was the king on both reliability and power. That can change in 2022, especially with Ferrari coming back into the picture, but given the history and track record Mercedes has had in the hybrid era, I would still put my money on them having the better overall package.
I’m not arguing if it is the better package (which I think it is), but from a purely reliability stand point, Honda was more reliable than Mercedes.