Today's issues 2 out of 3 were battery related which were Renault part. Renault took full responsibility for it. Said it was a bad bath and installation had nothing to do with it.johnny comelately wrote: ↑07 Mar 2018, 02:57Is all this with McLaren saying their problems are a lot to do with McLaren ? With Honda being a very unfortunate (bad engineering) coincidence.
My opinion is that it is and has been since and just before Martin Whitmarsh days, did Bruce have any children?
Stepping in here with that statement must be like sitting in the wrong stands at a manchester liverpool game i imagine
Curious that the only teams with battery problems are costumers Redbull and Mclaren, I guess Renault gets the best from the validation testsgalien wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 23:07The validation method for batteries is quite interesting, Renault do it itself with a live stress test, then they select the best candidates. Theses methods from electronic industry are far way form classical methods used in mechanic area such as metrology / x ray inspection.RonDennis wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 22:52Well it at least seems that none of the problems are being caused by the cooling, which is a good thing.galien wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 22:14More informations about the batteries issues.
https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... l-mclaren/
you are rightRedragon wrote: ↑07 Mar 2018, 05:46Curious that the only teams with battery problems are costumers Redbull and Mclaren, I guess Renault gets the best from the validation testsgalien wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 23:07The validation method for batteries is quite interesting, Renault do it itself with a live stress test, then they select the best candidates. Theses methods from electronic industry are far way form classical methods used in mechanic area such as metrology / x ray inspection.
It's the method chosen by a socialist company form a socialist country to ensure equality for both.Jef Patat wrote: ↑07 Mar 2018, 09:54I don't understand the battery story. They are 'tested' in testing to validate them before using them in the races? Can't they design/protect them so they don't break brutally to stop the car completely. For example run in a lower configuration so the car can at least do some other testing without being halted completely. That way the battery can be changed later on. I also don't understand why batteries need to be 'tested' or selected like this. It's like saying 'we made 10 but 5 of those won't work, go figure out which ones, good luck'. It just doesn't make sense to me. They should have enough data to do such a thing on the bench I would assume.
Definitely hypersofts on the McLaren. Boullier explained yesterday that it's not a performance thing, rather a need to get the tyres working quickly when they are planning testing things around short runs. Sometime a 10-lap or 12-lap stint isn't what they want to do, but that's what they'd need to have the tyres working properly.