F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Malaysia ‘makes sense’ for next Honda upgrade

Honda’s head of F1 project Yusuke Hasegawa says the upcoming Malaysian Grand Prix “makes sense” for the Japanese constructor to introduce a new power unit upgrade, though it will incur grid penalties.

Honda still has three engine development tokens left for 2016, having used 18 last winter, two in Canada for a new spec of turbocharger, another couple at Silverstone to improve the fuel system, and seven in Belgium last month for a major evolution related to the combustion chamber and turbo.

With Honda unwilling to face a grid setback for its home race at Suzuka, Hasegawa has pinpointed Sepang, which hosts F1 one week before, as a logical venue to spend the final tokens.

“We introduced a new engine in Spa and at that moment we had nine races [left] so we need to introduce one more engine,” he said. “If you split the nine races it could be Malaysia or Japan or the USA.

“We do not want to introduce the new engine and get a penalty at Suzuka, so Malaysia makes sense.”

When pressed to confirm whether Honda was unsure about where to unleash the upgrade, Hasegawa added: “Actually, I have already decided but it is not the time to disclose it!”

However, it remains to be decided whether Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button will both receive the evolution at the same time.

“This is also another discussion point for the team. I don’t want to get both cars behind from a race tactics and a constructors’ point of view. So we need to sort our tactics for the cars.”

While Honda is looking to further improve its internal combustion engine (ICE), Hasegawa admits the upgrade could focus on another area in light of the current feedback.

“We have three tokens left. Currently it is not very good on the dyno result, so I’m not sure we can introduce the new combustion. We will see.

“We may introduce [the upgrade] in a different area because once we change the combustion it will cost us so much setting time we do not want to put a lot of resource on it this year.

“The weight reduction or a tougher cylinder block or other area would give more power.”

Here is a recap of how many tokens each engine supplier has left at the moment:

Ferrari: 0 (32 used)
Honda: 3 (29 used)
Mercedes: 6 (26 used)
Renault: 18 (14 used)

Scene at the 2016 Singapore Grand Prix

Quotes of the week - 2016 Singapore Grand Prix

2016 Singapore Grand Prix - Driver ratings

REPORT: Rosberg takes title lead after Singapore thriller 

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Julien Billiotte

Recent Posts

Marko: Mercedes' biggest threat is in its own garage

Mercedes may have stormed into Formula 1’s new era with an iron grip on both…

1 hour ago

Magnussen set for NASCAR debut with Trackhouse Racing

Just when it seemed Kevin Magnussen had sampled nearly every corner of top-level motorsport, the…

17 hours ago

Honda pins hopes on Monaco-specific preparation amid troubles

Honda is heading into the Monaco Grand Prix with a targeted plan to desperately improve…

19 hours ago

Gasly and Colapinto on the hunt for more points in Monaco

Alpine head into the Monaco Grand Prix carrying quiet momentum and a sharper sense of…

20 hours ago

The hidden gem of Monaco 1984: A lost F1 phenom

In the collective memory of Formula 1 fans, the 1984 Monaco Grand Prix held on…

21 hours ago

Aston Martin showcases Maaden-inspired livery for Monaco GP

Aston Martin arrives in Monaco this weekend with a fresh coat of paint on its…

23 hours ago