McLAREN NOW HAS ‘CLEAR PLAN’ TO IMPROVE ITS 2022 F1 CAR
https://the-race.com/formula-1/mclaren- ... 22-f1-car/
Ground Effect wrote: ↑14 Apr 2022, 16:31I get your point, but depending on how serious the issue is, how much effort it would take, timeframe and the fact that there’s a cost cap, switching to next years car early isn’t such a stretch. Especially if they decide to change philosophy or concept.diffuser wrote: ↑14 Apr 2022, 14:29Nothing new in the regs next year. Other teams are going flat out and bring new parts making their car faster. McLaren need to the the same. If their is something wrong might as well change it now and test it. No point in waiting till next winter testing to figure it out. That would be too much time a wasted.Ground Effect wrote: ↑11 Apr 2022, 11:59
Agreed, I just hope they'll be able to gauge end of 2022 downforce levels and set an adequate 2023 target.
Regarding your first point, even though I agree with the logic behind it, I’m afraid that the team needs every minute of Free Practice available to them… With the apparent compromises that they have to make to get the tires into the right operating window (as you mention in your second point) lack of running may prevent them from achieving that… A lot still to be learned in terms of setup, I don’t think they will benefit from the lack of practice time and on the contrary, it will hinder them.MrGapes wrote: ↑15 Apr 2022, 04:48Few thoughts:
* Having one FP session should benefit the team in my opinion the car does seem pretty plug and play from previous FP1 sessions...seems to find a balance quite easily (could be due to lack of porpoising, not having to find trade offs etc.)
* Team has run larger wings than other teams in last races, Australia s3 is quite evident of this with the cars slow speed issues. This can help us in qualifying but the car loses a lot of free lap time in race on the straights. Hopefully the upgrades mean the rear wing can be trimmed a bit more.
* Curious as to how beneficial the new braking config will be, the brute force ducting solution on the car currently probably means the car is not run in its perfect setup window... I guess we will have to wait and see the larger package, I guess they will introduce the front strake section and ducting together due to aerodynamic cohesion.
Yes agree with first point, bit of a contradiction there, I do think Imola will be a good litmus test. Although should be easier for teams to setup with only one drs zone to account for, and with known grip data.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑15 Apr 2022, 06:36Regarding your first point, even though I agree with the logic behind it, I’m afraid that the team needs every minute of Free Practice available to them… With the apparent compromises that they have to make to get the tires into the right operating window (as you mention in your second point) lack of running may prevent them from achieving that… A lot still to be learned in terms of setup, I don’t think they will benefit from the lack of practice time and on the contrary, it will hinder them.MrGapes wrote: ↑15 Apr 2022, 04:48Few thoughts:
* Having one FP session should benefit the team in my opinion the car does seem pretty plug and play from previous FP1 sessions...seems to find a balance quite easily (could be due to lack of porpoising, not having to find trade offs etc.)
* Team has run larger wings than other teams in last races, Australia s3 is quite evident of this with the cars slow speed issues. This can help us in qualifying but the car loses a lot of free lap time in race on the straights. Hopefully the upgrades mean the rear wing can be trimmed a bit more.
* Curious as to how beneficial the new braking config will be, the brute force ducting solution on the car currently probably means the car is not run in its perfect setup window... I guess we will have to wait and see the larger package, I guess they will introduce the front strake section and ducting together due to aerodynamic cohesion.
Regarding your last point, I have a feeling that the brake issues have been overstated in regards to their impact to the car’s performance… I don’t think they are the culprit of the car missing more than a second compared to the front runners, the aerodynamic impact is minimal and is hard for us to quantify the impact on the tire temperature from them (not saying that there isn’t an impact, but is not as big as the fans are making it out to be)… Not having the tires in the right window should be more related to the lack of downforce, which is not letting them put enough energy on the tires… If the brake ducting would be so critical, we would have heard comments already from the team stating that as soon as the actual solution is placed in the car performance would have came back, but that’s not the message we are getting from them.
For one the, new track, layout took out alot of hard braking zones. That helped alot in comparison to Jeddah.michl420 wrote: ↑16 Apr 2022, 10:38I read always that the good result in Australia is mostly because of the track layout. I can not understand that because this new layout is very balanced. It has many (and one long) straights, slow (3,4, 13) and fast (6,9,10) corners. Only hard braking and long turns are missing, and those where mclarens strengths in the past ( and the barcelona test indicate that they at last still good in long turns). I am opptimistic that the poor result in the first 2 races are mostly because of the lack of test runs in bahrain.