dren wrote:
I was being kinda smart with my post above. But if you have components that have trouble with heat (overheating) then you certainly have a cooling problem. You have a problem cooling that component.
I read on another forum someone posted the Honda PU ran reliably with 100% Honda parts and at Mercedes 2014 power levels on the dyno, but once it was put in the McLaren chassis, McLaren used some McLaren parts that Honda was not aware of thus leading to some of the problems they are having now.
I find that slightly hard to believe, but you never know.
Why is that? I have been involved in quite a few major engineering projects and I have yet to see an assembly which comes together flawlessy. Especially when you work oversees and have to overcome lingual, cultural and metrix differences. If you have two parties working with different design software, then a mayor snafu is virtually guaranteed.
Just to give an example: engineer A looks at the drawings produced by engineer B half a planet away and sees a part of what he assumes to be hard water ducting. He places a hot component nearby. Engineer B has seen the part of engineer A nearby but doesn't realise it is hot (since CAD does not show temperature). Meanwhile he has to deal with some issues and decides to replace the hard ducting with some hose, but does not update the drawings since the duct is already in the drawing and he is in a hurry.
Thing gets put together, the flexible hose rubs against the hot component, and presto the management has to explain a waterfest to their customer. These things happen, they are somewhat preventable by discipline and communication, but it is hard especially in rushed projects where all components and specs are in a constant flux.
IMO the statement of Honda that they are caught out by last minute design changes is plausible. But then it is a shared responsibility to maintain the consistency of the design, blaming each other is generally not done.
flmkane wrote:I tried searching the thread but I could not find the answer to a very basic question.
How on earth did the engine work on the dyno, then overheat badly on the track?
I seems that the problem only appeared with the last design changes, since Ron was very happy to point out that they had no heat issues after their outing in Jerez.
“In the limited running we’ve done nothing’s overheating, which is normally what happens when you get it wrong on packaging, we’ve got no burning of heat shields. There is every indication that the mechanical design of the car, packaging wise, has been well executed.”
http://www1.skysports.com/f1/news/12433 ... arly-tests
Perhaps they just rushed the last batch of PIP's without doing full testing on the final config.