As much as I share the feeling that 20 years ago can't be representative, is quite understandable that Honda rarely hits the ground running without issues.
There are a million variables in a project being successful or not. Most cannot be known from the outside and many cant be judged properly even from within. So you simplify the evaluation based on results. Since the 90's that Ive been watching, Honda have never been one of the better PUs on the grid with new regulations. In fact they have been sub par to begin with and gradually they improve. So the hybrid era is not an outlier, its the norm. They were also late to this project having to restaff after losing people to RBPT. They have been later by a year or two vs Mercedes and Ferrai in terms testing milestones for these regs as well.diffuser wrote: ↑22 Jul 2025, 23:23Please don't start that.peewon wrote: ↑22 Jul 2025, 21:45Anytime a team deviates from all other teams on a major design choice, you know its high variance. But where Honda has been as a team before their reconstitution in terms of staffing makes me a bit nervous for them. Also not huge track record of leading out the gate in a new regulation set.madridista wrote: ↑20 Jul 2025, 14:15
In this German Interview, from Minute 3:00 onwards Ralf Bach dives into the engine Manufacturers in regards to Max Verstappen evaluating the situation in terms of competitiveness, upon which he at some point dives into honda at 3:15 and states :
"Ich hab jetzt gehört dass Honda einen ganz eigenen Weg geht was die Batterienschaltung betrifft für nächstes Jahr, also da sind Ferrari Ford und Mercedes auf einer Ebene ... Honda versucht da was anderes... Keine Ahnung ob das besser oder schlechter ist, es ist halt anders."
which translates to : "I've heard that Honda is taking a completely different approach when it comes to battery configuration for next year. So Ferrari, Ford, and Mercedes are on the same level... Honda is trying something else... No idea whether it's better or worse, it's just different."
Curious!
This would also confirm the rumors of their PU being the one about which not much is known.
If you don't know what happened and only know the result, ask.
Honda have no problems with new regs. The problem was they decided that they wanted to get involved in 2013 when everyone else jumped in in 2011. So they had 2 years less time to get ready. That led to them getting a bunch of stuff wrong. The whole token regs back then restricted you from changing more than 2 things at one time but in a ICE everything works together. So you can change the heads but can only change the intake OR the exhaust but not both....Well you can't. That's why they didn't resolve their problem until the token regs were removed and they were able to redesign the PU from scratch.
I think most companies are aiming to develop them since they will, in theory, offer an advantage in every way. Lighter and more compact, faster charging and discharging, able to handle higher power levels.zoroastar wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 05:13i wonder if this could have anything to do with the solid state batteries ive read about. i know absolutely nothing about the tech except that its lighter, and new. and i think honda has been trying to develop them
https://global.honda/en/tech/All-solid- ... echnology/
I can't find the battery regs from the FIA site but I seem to remember that they were pretty strict on the make up of the battery.WardenOfTheNorth wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 15:10I think most companies are aiming to develop them since they will, in theory, offer an advantage in every way. Lighter and more compact, faster charging and discharging, able to handle higher power levels.zoroastar wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 05:13i wonder if this could have anything to do with the solid state batteries ive read about. i know absolutely nothing about the tech except that its lighter, and new. and i think honda has been trying to develop them
https://global.honda/en/tech/All-solid- ... echnology/
yeah i know honda arent the only ones developing them. just wondered if that could be the "different route" that is spoken of about in this interview. it seems like it would fit, given that guy wouldnt know the intimate details of a power units design. but hearing that honda is working with a different type of battery may make some since. but really its just a shot in the darkWardenOfTheNorth wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 15:10I think most companies are aiming to develop them since they will, in theory, offer an advantage in every way. Lighter and more compact, faster charging and discharging, able to handle higher power levels.zoroastar wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 05:13i wonder if this could have anything to do with the solid state batteries ive read about. i know absolutely nothing about the tech except that its lighter, and new. and i think honda has been trying to develop them
https://global.honda/en/tech/All-solid- ... echnology/
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... 6-11_1.pdfdiffuser wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 16:09I can't find the battery regs from the FIA site but I seem to remember that they were pretty strict on the make up of the battery.WardenOfTheNorth wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 15:10I think most companies are aiming to develop them since they will, in theory, offer an advantage in every way. Lighter and more compact, faster charging and discharging, able to handle higher power levels.zoroastar wrote: ↑23 Jul 2025, 05:13i wonder if this could have anything to do with the solid state batteries ive read about. i know absolutely nothing about the tech except that its lighter, and new. and i think honda has been trying to develop them
https://global.honda/en/tech/All-solid- ... echnology/
Can anyone find the battery regs?