diffuser wrote:Wazari wrote:ripper wrote:There's a lot of talk about Mclaren chassis and aero, but there's something that I can't understand: how much did they sacrifice their PU in order to get their "size 0 philosophy"? Maybe they created an excellent chassis with wonderful air flow, but Honda had to shrink so much their packaging that now it isn't working properly or as expected.
I would have adopted a less extreme packaging for the first year (both aero and PU wise), but hindsight is a wonderful thing.
I think they sacrificed a lot and you can't forget size 0. I speak with two people on staff at Honda Racing on a regular basis. One being a relative and one a friend who I met at Toyota Racing. We did not work at Honda Racing at the same time. I do know they virtually scrapped their initial design concept they started in Q4 of 2013 when they received the size dimension requirements of the PU for the 4-30 chassis in mid 2014. That is why I don't understand why Honda didn't put their foot down at that time and tell Ron Dennis it can't be done. Oh well, what's done is done and now everyone is feeling the pain including me. I have my doubts about the MP4-30 chassis as being excellent. If you put Merc's current 2015 PU into the MP4-30, I really don't believe it would be any quicker than Williams and certainly not up to Ferrari.
It's REALLY hard to compare the present PU to air!
We have no idea what that PU would have been like. You're making a HUGE assumption that just because the dimensions of that PU are different, it would NOT have been designed with the SAME deficiencies.
For giggles, lets say the problem with the current PU is compressor is too small. If they didn't know better to make the compressor bigger in this iteration, what makes you think it would have been any bigger in the previous PU? You think that when they were designing the compressor they said , we need X boost from the compressor. The size zero compressor will give us X -2 bar...oh lets go with that? Surely someone would have said , that will not work, get me X boost. The more likely scenario is they designed in the X boost but they've come to realize they need X+2 bar or other unforeseen issues that are preventing them from getting that boost.
Honda didn't throw away the designs for the equivalent to the 2016 Merc PU in favour of this years Honda PU just for size 0.
He's not making any assumptions (despite clearly better informed then any of us around here). He only gave us more information on the matter. He's only voicing his doubts, which is not the same.
The guy publicly explained a few times already he worked for both Honda and Toyota in the past. I don't mind criticism, but stay respective for these boons we get. They are very rare in the seclusive world of F1. A message to everyone btw.
My opinion on the matter is that there are several factors all playing their own role:
-Honda started too late with the project, or alternatively jumped too quick back into F1. Like Facts Only said, they are now locked into a very, very difficult situation where they can't overhaul the complete PU design, in which they kind of rushed into. Honda lacks 3 out of 4 years the other manufacturers had to develop the car. You can't compensate that with innovation or diminishing returns.
-Honda was basically given some chassis dimensions by Mclaren to stuff a PU into. This is quite counter productive because a constructor will always want to built a chassis with the lowest obstruction to airflow and lowest drag footprint, while a manufacturer will to an extent want the opposite to have enough space for cooling and reliable packaging. This is a big issue for seperate companies who aren't working on direct workfloor and R&D levels. Sometimes this is even an issue in companies which does not have its departments work together well enough. Mercedes and Ferrari however have the PU/chassis integration worked out very fine.
-Issues of different company cultures: mclaren is pushy, short term minded. Honda is more tending towards long term. This results in Honda getting rushed by mclaren (maybe this even explains why Honda opted for such a short development period) and Honda not having enough space to develop in the long term (except if the PU rules do change). It'll result in a reinforcement of my second point: the companies will work less in synergy, while more was needed in the first place.