JUNE 14, 2026
Honda engineer got behind wheel to solve Aston problem
Honda has revealed that Aston Martin handed over a complete Formula 1 car and even allowed one of its senior engineers to drive it in a bid to solve one of the biggest problems of the opening phase of the 2026 season.
The new Aston Martin-Honda works partnership is enduring a disastrous start to the year, but among the most pressing of the early issues was the severe vibrations generated by the car and power unit package.
Honda Racing Corporation president Koji Watanabe says the issue is now largely under control.
After Suzuka, we brought the Aston Martin car to HRC Sakura, and we jointly analysed the vibrations and worked on countermeasures,
he told as-web.jp.
"The countermeasures included some hardware changes and software improvements. As a result, the vibrations were basically resolved, and there were no problems in the driver evaluations from the Miami GP to Monaco GP, so it has been largely resolved.
That was the biggest achievement of these past two months.
A key part of the solution involved Honda's trackside manager and chief engineer Shintaro Orihara actually driving the Aston Martin at Honda's Sakura facility in Japan.
I also went to see what they were doing,
Watanabe revealed.
"Aston Martin engineers were there and watched Orihara and the others actually driving the car. At Honda, the 'Three Realities Principle' which Soichiro Honda advocated from the very beginning of the company is still alive and well.
"Unless we can experience the vibrations that drivers are complaining about by actually driving the car, not just looking at data, and face the reality ourselves, the problem will not be solved.
I would like to thank Aston Martin for understanding this and for their cooperation.
Watanabe admitted it is highly unusual for engineers to be given the opportunity to drive racing machinery, particularly in Formula 1.
Basically, opportunities to drive a racing car are not that easy to come by,
he said. "It's rare even in Super Formula, and even rarer in Formula 1.
Even in testing production cars, it's basically only test drivers who get the chance to drive them. It's extremely rare for engineers to actually drive them like this.
(GMM)
