n smikle wrote:THey didn't say that was the cause though Marcush. They said one of the batteries are located near the gearbox where it exposed to high temps and vibrations. This was not quote by anybody from RBR.
The mystery is still open.
"Dazu kommt, dass Technikchef Adrian Newey die volle Konzentration auf die Aerodynamik fordert. Aus diesem Grund baute man die KERS-Batterien im Bereich des Getriebes ein, wo sie zwar die Aerodynamik nicht stΓΆren, aber hohen Temperaturen und Vibrationen ausgesetzt sind."
hm ..not really clear if this is opinion of the writer or what Marshall said ,you are right.At least the author is thinking that these two areas are the main concern.
Tbh I think so too ...Failures in electronics rarely have not one of these two causes contributing heavily to the failure profile...maybe the issues could be solved by better process control or other technical solutions better suited for the environment ..but I doubt the system shows the failure patterns when tested in the lab.
for comparison .-the original sun interview -no word about temps and vibrations ..
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/sp ... crets.html