Honda does too. Its been confirmed in quotes.Craigy wrote:Honda don't run detuned on Fridays - the others do.PlatinumZealot wrote:The times are looking very good so far in Malaysia second practice.
Personally I only really look at quali for an assessment of where the performance is.
The car!PlatinumZealot wrote:Nice! But who is the "dog" Alonso or Ron Dennis?
It was planned that way because they dont want grid penalties for the drivers at Hondas home race.McL-H wrote:Now I read that McLaren and Honda choose not to run this engine in tomorrow's race, even though they are happy with what the update brings. I don't understand. Why bring an updated version of an engine, taking a massive penalty, and then opt for not running it in the race? Don't you want to make use of the advantages a new engine has? I can't get my head around this one. Maybe they have a good reason for it, but it seems quite foolish to me.
Thanks for you comment. I can understand they want to check the durability of their engine, I hadn't thought about that. But how I see it, if Fernando runs this new PU from now on till the end of the season, they get 6 races to prove it can go at least 5 GP's. They could meanwhile use his Spa PU on Friday practices until it breaks down. Therefore, I still don't see what advantage it brings to keep the old engine while having a new one, especially in a sport wherein it's all about milliseconds.OviJohn wrote:It was planned that way because they dont want grid penalties for the drivers at Hondas home race.
Alonso´s old PU has only 3 races, and Honda is keen to keep proving/confirming they´re able to run a minimum of 5 GPs with their PUs. Reliability is very important, even more so for 2017 when only 3 PUs can be fitted during the season before getting grid penalties.
So Alonso will fit his old PU to run its 4th GP here and then fit the "final" season spec or "Susuka Special" next weekend. Jenson fit this version at Austin GP, penalise and run it there as it should be his last PU for the season (4 races)
Have you ever considered that the upgraded engine isn't designed to last more than one or two races? Suzuka special if you will. Possibly why they only want to run it at the next race. Both drivers take a penalty in Mexico which is going to be a tough race for them and ride out the rest of the season with new slightly more reliable upgraded engines. Because after Mexico it's Brazil then Abu Dhabi and the season's over.McL-H wrote:Thanks for you comment. I can understand they want to check the durability of their engine, I hadn't thought about that. But how I see it, if Fernando runs this new PU from now on till the end of the season, they get 6 races to prove it can go at least 5 GP's. They could meanwhile use his Spa PU on Friday practices until it breaks down. Therefore, I still don't see what advantage it brings to keep the old engine while having a new one, especially in a sport wherein it's all about milliseconds.OviJohn wrote:It was planned that way because they dont want grid penalties for the drivers at Hondas home race.
Alonso´s old PU has only 3 races, and Honda is keen to keep proving/confirming they´re able to run a minimum of 5 GPs with their PUs. Reliability is very important, even more so for 2017 when only 3 PUs can be fitted during the season before getting grid penalties.
So Alonso will fit his old PU to run its 4th GP here and then fit the "final" season spec or "Susuka Special" next weekend. Jenson fit this version at Austin GP, penalise and run it there as it should be his last PU for the season (4 races)
I can come up with two possibilities here:
1. they are idiots, which I highly doubt at this level,
2. they are not as convinced about this new PU's advantages as they make it appear to be.
Despite what Mclaren says in their quotes that new engine is for reliability only, i heard it does have a bit more power.....so Suzuka Special it is!godlameroso wrote:Have you ever considered that the upgraded engine isn't designed to last more than one or two races? Suzuka special if you will. Possibly why they only want to run it at the next race. Both drivers take a penalty in Mexico which is going to be a tough race for them and ride out the rest of the season with new slightly more reliable upgraded engines. Because after Mexico it's Brazil then Abu Dhabi and the season's over.McL-H wrote:Thanks for you comment. I can understand they want to check the durability of their engine, I hadn't thought about that. But how I see it, if Fernando runs this new PU from now on till the end of the season, they get 6 races to prove it can go at least 5 GP's. They could meanwhile use his Spa PU on Friday practices until it breaks down. Therefore, I still don't see what advantage it brings to keep the old engine while having a new one, especially in a sport wherein it's all about milliseconds.OviJohn wrote:It was planned that way because they dont want grid penalties for the drivers at Hondas home race.
Alonso´s old PU has only 3 races, and Honda is keen to keep proving/confirming they´re able to run a minimum of 5 GPs with their PUs. Reliability is very important, even more so for 2017 when only 3 PUs can be fitted during the season before getting grid penalties.
So Alonso will fit his old PU to run its 4th GP here and then fit the "final" season spec or "Susuka Special" next weekend. Jenson fit this version at Austin GP, penalise and run it there as it should be his last PU for the season (4 races)
I can come up with two possibilities here:
1. they are idiots, which I highly doubt at this level,
2. they are not as convinced about this new PU's advantages as they make it appear to be.
Or maybe Button takes a penalty in US for the upgrade, and Alonso uses the Suzuka special until the end of the season.
Supply Chain is the new Occam's razor.godlameroso wrote:Have you ever considered that the upgraded engine isn't designed to last more than one or two races? Suzuka special if you will. Possibly why they only want to run it at the next race. Both drivers take a penalty in Mexico which is going to be a tough race for them and ride out the rest of the season with new slightly more reliable upgraded engines. Because after Mexico it's Brazil then Abu Dhabi and the season's over.McL-H wrote:Thanks for you comment. I can understand they want to check the durability of their engine, I hadn't thought about that. But how I see it, if Fernando runs this new PU from now on till the end of the season, they get 6 races to prove it can go at least 5 GP's. They could meanwhile use his Spa PU on Friday practices until it breaks down. Therefore, I still don't see what advantage it brings to keep the old engine while having a new one, especially in a sport wherein it's all about milliseconds.OviJohn wrote:It was planned that way because they dont want grid penalties for the drivers at Hondas home race.
Alonso´s old PU has only 3 races, and Honda is keen to keep proving/confirming they´re able to run a minimum of 5 GPs with their PUs. Reliability is very important, even more so for 2017 when only 3 PUs can be fitted during the season before getting grid penalties.
So Alonso will fit his old PU to run its 4th GP here and then fit the "final" season spec or "Susuka Special" next weekend. Jenson fit this version at Austin GP, penalise and run it there as it should be his last PU for the season (4 races)
I can come up with two possibilities here:
1. they are idiots, which I highly doubt at this level,
2. they are not as convinced about this new PU's advantages as they make it appear to be.
Or maybe Button takes a penalty in US for the upgrade, and Alonso uses the Suzuka special until the end of the season. That would mean Alonso uses the special engine for Suz, U.S., Mex, Bra, and ADb or 5 races. That's probably more likely, especially if they're trying to overtake Williams.
An upgrade engine intentionally designed not to last more than 1 or 2 races? Why on earth would they do that. I do not think Honda is that stupid, to de-rail long term development just for the Suzuka race. It would an insult to the Japanese fans' intelligence, trying to fool them with unsustainable performance.godlameroso wrote:Have you ever considered that the upgraded engine isn't designed to last more than one or two races? Suzuka special if you will. Possibly why they only want to run it at the next race. Both drivers take a penalty in Mexico which is going to be a tough race for them and ride out the rest of the season with new slightly more reliable upgraded engines. Because after Mexico it's Brazil then Abu Dhabi and the season's over.
Or maybe Button takes a penalty in US for the upgrade, and Alonso uses the Suzuka special until the end of the season. That would mean Alonso uses the special engine for Suz, U.S., Mex, Bra, and ADb or 5 races. That's probably more likely, especially if they're trying to overtake Williams.
ME4ME wrote:
...
In my opinion the only reason not to race the latest engine spec in Malaysia is for tuning reasons. No doubt any upgrade needs fine-tuning to the software as well as physical adaptation within the car. Surely they want to spend more time optimizing with the data they have now gained, before actually racing the new spec.