Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

The details in Mercedes' Montreal F1 updates

Feature
Formula 1
Canadian GP
The details in Mercedes' Montreal F1 updates

Supercars Symmons Plains: Toyota pair Mostert and Heimgartner share wins

Supercars
Tasmania Super 440
Supercars Symmons Plains: Toyota pair Mostert and Heimgartner share wins

“A serious matter” – why the FIA hit Racing Bulls with a €30,000 fine when Lawson stopped on track

Formula 1
Canadian GP
“A serious matter” – why the FIA hit Racing Bulls with a €30,000 fine when Lawson stopped on track

F1 Canadian GP: Russell defeats Antonelli to Canada F1 sprint pole

Formula 1
Canadian GP
F1 Canadian GP: Russell defeats Antonelli to Canada F1 sprint pole

Red Bull F1 team boss: "No intention behind" public meeting between Verstappen and Wolff

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Red Bull F1 team boss: "No intention behind" public meeting between Verstappen and Wolff

F1 compromise to make 2027 engine change could include shortening races

Formula 1
Canadian GP
F1 compromise to make 2027 engine change could include shortening races

Mercedes and McLaren debut host of updates at F1 Canadian GP

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Mercedes and McLaren debut host of updates at F1 Canadian GP

LIVE: F1 Canadian Grand Prix updates - Russell takes sprint pole ahead of Antonelli

Formula 1
Canadian GP
LIVE: F1 Canadian Grand Prix updates - Russell takes sprint pole ahead of Antonelli

Honda needs to embrace F1 culture - McLaren's Eric Boullier

A better understanding of the racing culture in Formula 1 is the main thing Honda needs to improve its flagging fortunes in F1, according to McLaren racing director Eric Boullier

Honda has endured a difficult return to F1 since pairing up with McLaren ahead of the 2015 season, and it looks set for another troubled campaign in 2017 after a disastrous eight days of pre-season testing in Spain.

Relations with McLaren have become strained in recent weeks, as McLaren faces the prospect of another season of poor results.

McLaren recovery would be 'Houdini-like'

Honda has appeared reluctant to embrace outside influences on its nascent F1 programme, and Boullier said Honda has so far failed to fully grasp the speed and accuracy of development required to be successful in F1, which is the main thing holding the project back.

"They only need one thing, which is to understand and integrate the F1 racing culture," Boullier told Autosport.

"What I mean by that is: the way we behave in racing and Formula 1 is all driven by a calendar, by some fixed targets, fixed dates, lap time gains; we always try to go to the best solution as fast as possible.

"Where a car manufacturer is running a project, you can have a few weeks delay and it's not going to change the product, it's not going to change the business model.

"In racing, if you don't bring your upgrade for race one, in race one you will be nowhere.

"That is this racing mentality. It's as far as going to suppliers and making sure that if they do something in one month, the next time they do it in three weeks, and from three weeks to two weeks.

+ Can McLaren-Honda be saved from crisis?

"We value more the time gained than the money spent. This is a different approach from the rest of the world."

Honda has invested in a remote engine workshop in Milton Keynes, but Boullier reckons keeping its main base in Japan, and working to the corporate culture of the parent motor company, means the F1 operation is too slow to cope with the demands of modern grand prix racing.

"This is why Mercedes is based in England, and I guess they benefit from the supply chain, from people with experience of F1," Boullier added.

"Our suppliers maybe cost twice as much [as Honda's] but are three, four, five times faster.

"In some ways you can realise the corporate influence is not helping to be efficient.

"The more you behave like a corporate company, the more process inherited from a corporate company, the slower you are, the less agile you are, which doesn't fit the racing culture."

Previous article How wider 2017 tyres will make F1 pitstop times harder to replicate
Next article F1 races still won't be flat out despite low-deg tyres - Hulkenberg

Top Comments

Latest news