- Joined
- Mar 23, 2016
Boggles the mind. All you need to do is pick a one gallon tank, fill that with F1's E10 fuel, slap the fuel pump on there so it just drops the fuel back into the tank and let it run on the max setting for 2.5 hours. Bam. You just did a worst case simulation for a timeframe that is longer than an F1 race is even allowed to be. Do that a couple of times and check for wear and tear every now and then.It's an absolute embarrassment for the sport and the supplier they get to build them. It is well known which materials do and don't get along with ethanol.
The UK and quite a few European countries have had E10 as standard from pumps for a while now and before the switch there was an awareness campaign for those that would need to retrofit to handle it.
The FIA need to have a review of why the hell this has happened from a company which is trusted to be the sole supplier of the component and this is the result. The switch to E10 has been long known about and they have had ample time to design and test the part.
As someone who works as an engineer designing systems which are safety critical I can't comprehend them not know this was going to be a problem and taking appropriate precautions.
If the double fuel pump failure on RB had happened 10 races in with the same fuelpumps they used from the start, I'd say okay, you might run into some issues with this kind of equippement after some time, but these pumps failed in the first race. That's indeed embarassing to the company that made the pumps.
Also, what was wrong with Verstappen's steering, do we know? Cause I doubt the steering got damaged by the broken fuel pump.
Audi McLaren just doesn't have a nice ring to it, don't you think? Minor point, yeah I know, but still.No idea about Porsche but there's been a bunch of rumors that Audi is going to buy Mclaren.
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