Then dumped Hartley and brought back Kvyat.NathanOlder wrote: ↑25 Dec 2018, 15:58Very true, he was still dumped by Toro Rosso though and when Hartley ends up in his seat, it shows how low they rated him.
Then dumped Hartley and brought back Kvyat.NathanOlder wrote: ↑25 Dec 2018, 15:58Very true, he was still dumped by Toro Rosso though and when Hartley ends up in his seat, it shows how low they rated him.
Wazari wrote: There's a saying in Japan, He might be higher than testicles on a giraffe...........
Helmut Marko - 25.10.2013 wrote:According to Marko, the result of an analysis of the three candidates Daniil Kvyat, Antonio Felix da Costa and Carlos Sainz junior clearly spoke for the new Toro Rosso driver: "Kvyat offers us the best overall package, proving that he can handle pressure Did we miss out on da Costa? If he's already weakening in the junior series, how should it be in Formula One? "
"I do not have to tell you how many riders have been sold as a great talent before they failed at the top, with Kvyat showing a very steep uphill form last time, as it went down or flat on da Costa."
To be Honest, Honda have only really had this year to develop the power unit they wanted to develop because of the Mclaren years Honda were forced to conform to mclaren's needs over power unit development.NathanOlder wrote: ↑24 Dec 2018, 23:55I see what you're saying, but you could easily say Honda have had 4yrs of testing and have still been under performing, Kvyat was thrown out by Red Bull and Toro Rosso before and only came back in my opinion because Toro Rosso had no one else to take.Zynerji wrote: ↑24 Dec 2018, 18:16The STR14 is going to be the RB15Lite.NathanOlder wrote: ↑24 Dec 2018, 12:10Well Honda is a vulnerable power unit. As proven for the last 4yrs. Of the the 2 teams running that power unit, Toro Rosso have Albon and Kvyat, whereas Red Bull have Max and Gasly.
So I'd say he's spot on.
Honda used all of 2018 as an in season test, and had no intention of holding to 3 engines, just constant iteration.
Kvyat is capable of podiums as his RBR record shows.
I think STR has everything in 2019 to be a huge surprise. I mean, look at how well Haas had gone, and the expectation is that RBR will help STR at a level that Ferrari couldn't help Haas.
If the RBR clone that is operated by STR can be within 2 tenths over a lap to the senior team, they can definitely reach for 4th in the constructors.
I'm not saying that Toro Rosso can't surprise, I'm just saying everything GPR-A said was pretty accurate. Honda and the 2 Toro Rosso drivers have had more failure than success in the Hybrid era.
To be honest I highly doubt that RB or TR do not have design constraints themselves that need to be worked around (and vice versa). McLaren and Honda were not blamed until the finger pointing started. Time will only tell. Some relationships simply do not work, it doesn't matter how many talented people you have on each side.foneFanatiq wrote: ↑04 Jan 2019, 23:27To be Honest, Honda have only really had this year to develop the power unit they wanted to develop because of the Mclaren years Honda were forced to conform to mclaren's needs over power unit development.
[/quote]foneFanatiq wrote: ↑05 Jan 2019, 23:54True. But it was said when developing the STR13 that they were building the car around the PU. Honda could design or do whatever and Toro Rosso would build around it, giving Honda a lot more opportunities to make the PU how they initially wanted it.
To be honest I highly doubt that RB or TR do not have design constraints themselves that need to be worked around (and vice versa). McLaren and Honda were not blamed until the finger pointing started. Time will only tell. Some relationships simply do not work, it doesn't matter how many talented people you have on each side.
Honda’s head of motorsport, Yasuhisa Arai, said: “As you can see with the new MP4-30, we’ve dedicated ourselves as one team with McLaren to creating a new car that compromises on nothing – either power or aerodynamics.
“Yet, in the midst of the excitement, both myself and our engineers are 100% focused in both Sakura and Milton Keynes to prepare for Jerez and beyond. We’re confident that the technology is there and I’m looking forward to see how it will perform.
-Andy Green: "When we put the car in the wind tunnel after the rule changes, the car looked really terrible" "We are talking about a loss of several seconds of lap time."
German:
„Das Auto hat echt übel ausgesehen, als wir es erstmals nach den Regeländerungen in den Windkanal gestellt haben“, erinnert sich Green.
„Wir sprechen da von einem Verlust von mehreren Sekunden, was die Rundenzeit angeht.
-Article states that the clean airflow towards the diffuser and "the wing elements" (not stated if front or rear wing, but rear wing makes more sense) will be the defining challenge-Andy Green: "The learning curve is steep. But we can't tell for sure if we are ever able to regain the loss [of downforce]
German:
„Die Lernkurve ist steil. Ob wir den Verlust aber jemals komplett wieder gutmachen können, lässt sich noch nicht sagen.“
-Article says that if the high-rake philosophy doesn't work anymore Force India, Red Bull and McLaren could be compromised the worst.-Andy Green: "We wondered for a long time if the desire for a lot of rake is the correct path for the future"
German:
„Wir haben uns die Frage lange gestellt, ob unser Wunsch nach einer hohen Anstellung der richtige Weg für die Zukunft ist“
Both Honda and McLaren failed and failed miserably and started pointing fingers at each other. On Honda's part, it is BS to say, McLaren didn't allow them to develop the way they wanted and put constraints. You need to go back in time to read how Mercedes chassis team asked, what seemed at that time as improbable, the split the design of turbo and compressor. It was a great idea as it would help the chassis team in tight packaging and aero benefits. And the engine department took it as a challenge and came out with a monster power unit. So, it's not like you can't do it. It's all excuses for failures that Honda pointed fingers at McLaren.foneFanatiq wrote: ↑05 Jan 2019, 23:54True. But it was said when developing the STR13 that they were building the car around the PU. Honda could design or do whatever and Toro Rosso would build around it, giving Honda a lot more opportunities to make the PU how they initially wanted it.subcritical71 wrote: ↑05 Jan 2019, 19:51To be honest I highly doubt that RB or TR do not have design constraints themselves that need to be worked around (and vice versa). McLaren and Honda were not blamed until the finger pointing started. Time will only tell. Some relationships simply do not work, it doesn't matter how many talented people you have on each side.
There is nothing more to say here. Honda already failed, it's now just a question of whether or not they can save face. McLaren's failures started in 2012.GPR -A wrote: ↑10 Jan 2019, 15:26Honda had one massive advantage and no other manufacturer had and that is, a full hands on access to class leading Mercedes PU that McLaren was using in 2014. While every other manufacturer worked in dark until the PU came to light in 2014, Honda exactly knew what the benchmark is and had a clear view of how that gem of PU looked like inside out. Yet, they failed.
GPR -A wrote: ↑10 Jan 2019, 15:26It's been 6 years for Honda now (including the 2014 when they started building the PU) and even if cosworth would have got that kind of budgets, they would have probably built a better PU in such a time frame. Honda is still searching for reliability and power gains.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/red- ... e/4321700/Despite recent reports suggesting Honda had discovered a new vibration problem when testing its 2019 engine, it is understood that the manufacturer has not experienced a major setback although is hoping to make more progress with the development before testing begins.
Come on, we're all gonna see the consequences of Mattia getting team principle. I'm not sure about this being a good idea either, but 4th after Renault?
Pirre Gasly was bolted a new ICE in Mexico and that was taken out under parc ferme in Abu Dhabi after qualifying and was replaced with an old ICE, which then failed in the race. That is the condition of the reliability at the end of November 2018. They sure must be doing some miracles to be at 5 PU elements that Marko has been talking about for 2019. Because the rate of reliability at which they finished the 2018 season, they might need another 8 to 9 PUs to finish 2019.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Jan 2019, 16:30GPR -A wrote: ↑10 Jan 2019, 15:26It's been 6 years for Honda now (including the 2014 when they started building the PU) and even if cosworth would have got that kind of budgets, they would have probably built a better PU in such a time frame. Honda is still searching for reliability and power gains.
2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 are 5 years, NOT 6.
Honda started with a new concept in 2017, so they have been working on that engine for 2 years now and they made a lot of progress.
Btw, every engine builder is still searching for reliability and powergains, that's called development.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/red- ... e/4321700/Despite recent reports suggesting Honda had discovered a new vibration problem when testing its 2019 engine, it is understood that the manufacturer has not experienced a major setback although is hoping to make more progress with the development before testing begins.