He had ICE #5, MGUh #5 and TC #5 in Malaysia, which gave him a 20 place grid penalty.
Yes, that's what i was thinking, he will be able to use the 2 ICEs.
There is a lot of components that you can change every race on the PU side. Including spark plugs, cables etc...
Would be interesting to know if the latest spec ICE is the spec which was to be introduced by Ferrari in Monza, but apparently wasn't. I think this is also the spec which Haas is using from the Belgium GP onwards. Does anybody have an idea about this?
From what I understand, Haas are using Spec 3.bergie88 wrote: ↑04 Oct 2017, 18:49Would be interesting to know if the latest spec ICE is the spec which was to be introduced by Ferrari in Monza, but apparently wasn't. I think this is also the spec which Haas is using from the Belgium GP onwards. Does anybody have an idea about this?
The one he had an issue with had some sort of electrical issue. Something that would be impossible to trace/rectify between practice and qualifying.Mattchu wrote: ↑04 Oct 2017, 17:55Surely the fact Vettel had to put a new power unit in means at least one [or part of] is broken! Are the teams allowed to repair a broken ICE/PU part and put it back in the pool.
Do we know what actually broke, was it the ICE, MGUH or TC, all of which were replaced? If it was the ICE then surely that was a new spec one and is now written off and replaced with the one he did the race with.
So by my logic [probably wrong] if it was a new spec ICE, Vettel only has one new spec in his pool [the previos one is broke] plus the three old ones...so he still only has four ICE`s...If it was a different part then he may have 5 but only 4 or less of whatever broke.
So it wasnt turbo's fault (not moderator one)Sevach wrote: ↑06 Oct 2017, 14:32http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2017/10/06/f ... -malaysia/
Binotto on what happened in Malaysia and how the team responded.
I don't buy that. Sounds like more internet wild speculation.CriXus wrote: ↑08 Oct 2017, 19:21According to @SmilexTech (contributor for funoanalisitechnica.com), Ferrari and Mercedes have the same spark plugs supplier from Japan. It's not about quality control, Ferrari's latest evolution (Evo 4) of the ICE was not designed for the post Monza oil burning limit and to recover for the loss of power they used more aggressive approach in the combustion, but that caused more stress on spark plugs.