engine pic
Hi Turbo, I've read somewhere that FIA gave Honda 2 more additional days to homologate the engine but I'm not sure if it was here on the forum or somewhere else. Also, the teams have right to change engine parts due to safety reasons during the season wright?turbof1 wrote:According to autosport, mclaren will bring their own seal of the mgu-k for the coming test, instead of the Honda one. Apperently other manufacturers faced the same problem last year and there is no easy fix.
Mclaren wants to give Honda more time by running their own seal, based on knowledge about the KERS, but let's not forget that the deadline for Honda to homologate their PU is coming in 3 days. After that Honda needs to apply for reliability exceptions, a procedure that involves sharing information with the competition.
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
I have prepared a couple of these "reliability" reports and honestly they are no big deal. The information provided is genuinely pathetic, probably a close up picture of part of the seal on someone's desk with a few words along the lines of "this one leaks so he have changed the shape so it doesn't leak".turbof1 wrote:Hi Bauc,
They could definitely use the 2 additional days, so if true certainly a boost to them.
As I mentioned: yes they are allowed to make changes to the PU for reliability issues. However, they need to hand over a detailed report on the issue and the proposed changes, to the FIA. The FIA then distributes that very same report to the other manufacturers. The reasoning behind this is to make sure there are no hidden performance changers. It also means that any manufacturer can outright veto it. The biggest issue however is that you are charing very vital information on your PU to the competition. As you might know, Mclaren has managed to have a very tight packaging, undoubtly aided by the Honda PU managing the heat very well. Such a report could hold data on construction and/or materials that enable that heat managing.
That is really useful information, so would you say it will be fairly easy for Honda to make the reliability changes after homologation without using tokens and giving too much away in regards to design of the PU?Facts Only wrote:I have prepared a couple of these "reliability" reports and honestly they are no big deal. The information provided is genuinely pathetic, probably a close up picture of part of the seal on someone's desk with a few words along the lines of "this one leaks so he have changed the shape so it doesn't leak".turbof1 wrote:Hi Bauc,
They could definitely use the 2 additional days, so if true certainly a boost to them.
As I mentioned: yes they are allowed to make changes to the PU for reliability issues. However, they need to hand over a detailed report on the issue and the proposed changes, to the FIA. The FIA then distributes that very same report to the other manufacturers. The reasoning behind this is to make sure there are no hidden performance changers. It also means that any manufacturer can outright veto it. The biggest issue however is that you are charing very vital information on your PU to the competition. As you might know, Mclaren has managed to have a very tight packaging, undoubtly aided by the Honda PU managing the heat very well. Such a report could hold data on construction and/or materials that enable that heat managing.
You can get away with this because no-one will ever vito anyone else's changes. This happens as they know that whoever they vito'd will just vito their next change to spite them and then they will vito them back and then eventually no manufacturer can make any changes as everyone will be stuck in a viscous circle of vito'ing and being vito'd.
You can also make changes to reduce the cost and submit the same type of report, its funny how quite often the new cheaper parts are a bit lighter/tighter/smaller/better as well.
It quite a ludicrous system.
Thank you for the detailed reply.turbof1 wrote:Hi Bauc,
They could definitely use the 2 additional days, so if true certainly a boost to them.
As I mentioned: yes they are allowed to make changes to the PU for reliability issues. However, they need to hand over a detailed report on the issue and the proposed changes, to the FIA. The FIA then distributes that very same report to the other manufacturers. The reasoning behind this is to make sure there are no hidden performance changers. It also means that any manufacturer can outright veto it. The biggest issue however is that you are charing very vital information on your PU to the competition. As you might know, Mclaren has managed to have a very tight packaging, undoubtly aided by the Honda PU managing the heat very well. Such a report could hold data on construction and/or materials that enable that heat managing.
I'd like to know too, especially what is sealed against what?santos wrote:Does any one have a picture or a draw of what is the "seal of the mgu-k"?
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
Not 100% accurate.PistoniRoventi wrote:McLaren to run an old KERS unit instead of the problematic MGU-K at the final pre-season tests...
http://autosprint.corrieredellosport.it ... nda/25655/