Your first paragraph explains it is not Mclaren fault there suspension / brakes are not designed properly because that it was testing is for.Chicane wrote: ↑26 Mar 2017, 18:16Testing is needed to understand the loads and torsional forces experienced by various mechanicals under full load of fuel over a race distance. This becomes even more critical as there are bigger heavier tires and higher G forces because of new regulations. It is commendable that Mclaren have zeroed in on a decent setup so soon because of the excellent correlation they have managed to develop over the last 2 years.
The problem Honda are facing in my opinion is that their inability to pickup issues on the test bed. I am not saying all the issues can be picked up on a dyno but a modern 7 post rig can at least pick up basic stuff. Honda have the resources to turn it around but i feel they are responding a bit slowly to the issues at hand. They are more often reacting to the issues arising instead of being proactive. I hope they have enough data generated over the weekend which will help them clean up the rough edge of this spec software wise and will put the learning towards the up coming spec.
Then in the second you are giving Honda a hard time for having failures in testing which shows they haven't designed properly.
As ever, you can't have it both ways.
I find it ironic that after testing we find out its actually the chassis that didnt last a race distance.