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Aston Martin's switch to Honda power units has faced significant challenges, with the team only finishing one race in the first three Grands Prix due to engine vibrations causing damage. The issues have led to multiple retirements and poor performance for drivers.
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Just two months ago, it was nearly unthinkable for an Aston Martin car to complete a Formula 1 grand prix.
The teamâs switch to a works Honda power unit deal from customer Mercedes powertrains backfired, with the Japanese engine generating vibrations that repeatedly damaged batteries and tended to numb driversâ bodies.
As a consequence, Aston Martin recorded just one official finish over the first three grands prix, totalling four retirements while Lance Stroll was unclassified in Melbourne, unable to complete more than 15 laps without a break.
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However, one of the AMR26s stayed in Japan following the Suzuka round to be studied by Honda engineers during F1âs unexpected five-week break in April, and the Miami Grand Prix marked a significant improvement, as both cars finished the sprint and the main race in Florida.
âThe reliability and the vibrations are much better than what it has been so far,â Fernando Alonso commented after qualifying. âThat's the main positive of this weekend. Let's say we can tick that box because the car behaves normal now. No issues to finish the race tomorrow. No reliability concerns.â
Aston Martin encountered severe vibrations from the Honda power unit that damaged batteries and affected driver comfort, leading to poor race finishes.
Aston Martin managed to complete only one official finish in the first three races after switching to the Honda power unit.
Lance Stroll has been notably affected, being unclassified in Melbourne and unable to complete more than 15 laps due to the engine problems.
Before switching to Honda, Aston Martin used customer powertrains from Mercedes.
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The Spanish veteran confirmed after the main race that he had no vibrations on Sunday, while Stroll laconically reported âless vibrationsâ.
Lance Stroll, Aston Martin Racing
Aston Martin chief trackside officer Mike Krack and Honda Racing Corporation trackside general manager Shintaro Orihara were subsequently asked about the issue and the driversâ somewhat divergent comments.
âI think we are happy with it, and I think our partner wants to do more,â Krack elusively replied, with Orihara adding: âAfter the Japanese Grand Prix, I mentioned HRC and Aston Martin worked very hard to bring countermeasures here. We confirmed them working well, and also, drivers gave us positive comments. That's good progress for Aston Martin and Honda.
âWe have completed a full race distance and also a sprint race distance without any major reliability issue. That is good progress. Then, next focus point, we can focus to optimise our data setting for energy management and also drivability. There is still a lot of room to improve on our power unit. That's the next step for us.â
Orihara did clarify that âcountermeasures from both sidesâ were required to fix the vibrations issues, given they spread into the chassis.
The teamâs focus will now be on performance, which the AMR26 has clearly been lacking regardless of reliability.
Alonso and Stroll qualified respectively 18th and 19th for the grand prix, a whopping 1.2s down on the Q2 cutoff time, though the Spaniard was hampered by gearbox issue causing ârandom downshiftsâ. Cadillac was their only rival in the race â which Aston finished 78 seconds away from points.
âIn terms of pace, we didn't bring any part here,â Alonso pointed out after qualifying. âProbably we fall behind a little bit extra than the last race.â So, the two-time world champion is not expecting any breakthrough before the summer break, as the team refrains from bringing upgrades.
Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin Racing
âI'm at peace because I understand the situation,â he added after the race. âThe team explained to me that we are P20 or P19 and the next car is one second in front, so even if we bring two tenths every race, it doesn't change our position â and it's a huge stress in the system, in the budget cap and things like that.
âSo, until we have a 1.5s or two-second improvement, it's better not to press the button in production, because we waste money.â
Krack confirmed that stance, explaining that Aston was yet to optimise the current AMR26 package.
âWe also must acknowledge that there is a big gap to close and this will not be the work of a week,â he concluded.
Additional reporting by Stuart Codling and Cihangir Perperik
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