I just don't see how Vettel is going to do the remaining races without a penalty. Are they rotating just 4 turbos for the whole year? Imo that would be idiotic, as used items will lose efficiency over time and you are restricting development unless you agree to a penalty. I would guess and say that Vettel will get his 5th turbo and penalty at either Spa or Monza. Would be very shocked if they don't do it there.Sevach wrote: ↑27 Jul 2017, 21:56Ferrari spotted something they didn't like on their turbo in Bahrain, it caused Kimi's engine failure, as to not take chances they fitted a new turbo to Vettel's car for that race (this turbo was of the same model of the old flawed one).
For Sochi both Ferrari drivers got a new turbo(number 3), one that had fixed this fragility.
For Barcelona Vettel was suppoused to get engine number 2, turbo 3 was installed to it.
In FP3 this engine failed to get going, the team didn't have the time to do a full inspection ahead of qualifying and opted for a wholesale engine change and re-fitted engine number 1, but this time fitted with another new turbo (i assume same spec as Sochi).
I believe turbos 3 and 4 are very much alive (Kimi is still using his Sochi turbo) i'm not sure if they can make it to the end of the season but it's not impossible.
If they find a turbo development that gives them .2 or more do they take a penalty? Probably, i would.
Keep in mind that the turbos don't have to be end of life to be removed from the engine. It is actually a good strategy to rotate them as much as Ferrari has been doing. You juggle the turbos to share the wear and tear amongst them more evenly; remember, different tracks are hard on different components.Hammerfist wrote: ↑28 Jul 2017, 16:27I just don't see how Vettel is going to do the remaining races without a penalty. Are they rotating just 4 turbos for the whole year? Imo that would be idiotic, as used items will lose efficiency over time and you are restricting development unless you agree to a penalty. I would guess and say that Vettel will get his 5th turbo and penalty at either Spa or Monza. Would be very shocked if they don't do it there.Sevach wrote: ↑27 Jul 2017, 21:56Ferrari spotted something they didn't like on their turbo in Bahrain, it caused Kimi's engine failure, as to not take chances they fitted a new turbo to Vettel's car for that race (this turbo was of the same model of the old flawed one).
For Sochi both Ferrari drivers got a new turbo(number 3), one that had fixed this fragility.
For Barcelona Vettel was suppoused to get engine number 2, turbo 3 was installed to it.
In FP3 this engine failed to get going, the team didn't have the time to do a full inspection ahead of qualifying and opted for a wholesale engine change and re-fitted engine number 1, but this time fitted with another new turbo (i assume same spec as Sochi).
I believe turbos 3 and 4 are very much alive (Kimi is still using his Sochi turbo) i'm not sure if they can make it to the end of the season but it's not impossible.
If they find a turbo development that gives them .2 or more do they take a penalty? Probably, i would.
Nah... I see Hamilton romping off into the Hungarian sunset. The secret to Hungary is don't set your car up for the race until FP3.
I would add that depends on philosophy. If you don't let components naturally wear, you will not find their design flaws and would be left with four Turbos with the same inherent flaw.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑28 Jul 2017, 17:29Keep in mind that the turbos don't have to be end of life to be removed from the engine. It is actually a good strategy to rotate them as much as Ferrari has been doing. You juggle the turbos to share the wear and tear amongst them more evenly; remember, different tracks are hard on different components.
i was watching http://www.sporttwin.info/p/formula-1-h ... tream.html also it should be on Formula 1 youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/user/Formula1
Yeah his best time is on the S compound.
I think that they study the wearing of components on dynos where as far as I know they can run how much engines as they want and all the teams try to avoid to have a failure during a race or a qualification.TAG wrote: ↑28 Jul 2017, 17:33I would add that depends on philosophy. If you don't let components naturally wear, you will not find their design flaws and would be left with four Turbos with the same inherent flaw.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑28 Jul 2017, 17:29Keep in mind that the turbos don't have to be end of life to be removed from the engine. It is actually a good strategy to rotate them as much as Ferrari has been doing. You juggle the turbos to share the wear and tear amongst them more evenly; remember, different tracks are hard on different components.