Manoah2u wrote:Richard wrote:Manoah2u wrote:[Overall mileage across the pre-season testing 2015 - Mclaren - Honda, 1751 km
Overall mileage across the pre-season testing 2014 - Red Bull - Renault, 1705 km.
Honda's problem is keeping the engine running. So the relevant stats are:
2015 Honda test mileage = 1 751 km
2014 test mileage:
- 1. Mercedes, 17 994 km
- 2. Ferrari, 10 214 km
- 3. Renault, 8 743 km
not really,
these are comparisons of entire engine providers.
People are judging Mclaren. the same happened to RedBull last year.
We're not talking Honda's issues versus Renault's issues here. I'm pointing at RedBull's issues compared to Mclaren's issues.
RedBull was given no chance for Melbourne and did a rabbit out of the hat.
There is no reason Mclaren can't do the same.
Even though Renault as a provider combined has done more mileage in 2014 compared to a single manufacturer in the form of Honda in 2015, RedBull was in a grim situation at the very last day of testing - or so it seemed.
Whilst there is no reasonable reason to assume Mclaren will be performing like a champ come weekend, there is no reason to think they aren't able to do a single lap either.
With respect to McLaren, they are not as operationally efficient as Red Bull.
Last year Red Bull was a team coming off the back of 4 consecutive Constructor's and Driver's World Championships. They had the personnel, procedures, technical skills, facilities, money and mindset to overcome their issues as far as was possible. They were also dealing with an engine partner that has years and many championships worth of consistent experience, and had multiple teams worth of data to look at to attempt to correct their issues.
This year McLaren are hoping to come out of a lean period. They haven't looked like winning a race for years. They have the facilities, the money and the mindset to achieve, but I would question their depth in personnel and technical skill. And they are certainly not as procedurally efficient as Red Bull were.
Honda do not have years of experience at their disposal. Yes, they have been a part of the grid at various stages but they have never been ever present and their championship successes are decades in the past. Their recent attempts have been average by F1 standards.
Honda also do not have the luxury of multiple team support, so every problem affects them more extensively than those experienced by Renault last year.
I won't discount the possibility of McLaren 'pulling a rabbit out of the hat', but a realistically good result would be finishing. Points would be the rabbit IMO.