Is there a particular reason your shoving other members on to the witness stand lol?Mudflap wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 22:50That can only happen if you pour fuel into the oil tank. Not even then - in ww2 german pilots used to pour petrol into the crankcase in the winter to start the engines. As I have said previously - if something is wrong with the oil, the highly loaded hydrodynamic bearings (big ends and mains) will always fail first.Zynerji wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 22:31I would say that there is always going to be a small amount of blow by, and it would make sense that the much lighter fuel would rise to the top of the oil tank, get pulled in by the pump, and delivered directly to the fluid bearing of the turbo. Gasoline washes off oil, leading to a catastrophic fluid bearing failure. Vapor may not be the best term, but this make sense as I've seen a similar problem happen to Bisimoto in a magazine years ago.
And if it's agreed upon that these engines lose 1% power every 700km, is expect that a decent part of that is ring blow-by.
Oil is changed after each race, it doesn't do 10k miles like a road car.
Do you know what the chemical make up is of the actual lubricants they are using? What the fuel is? The internal structure of the ICE, the actual design of the intake system and oil tank and their relationship? You're asking questions and then telling them they are wrong so this will be an endless circle of half informed misery.
We, as the interested public, know what the issue was, from Honda. MGU-H shaft hearing failure. Getting the ultra intricate details as to why and how this occurred is likely never going to happen. Since when has a manufacturer sat down and spent a lot of time describing down to the hair what has happened to the general audience, especially when the internal design is pretty much classified anyway.