If that is the case which I haven't heard definitively, I presume there are things they can do to try and compensate even if it is an inherent trait. Like changes to the suspension, front wing, ride height etc, not just playing around with the rear of the car. There is alot of classes of racing that have 18inch + wheels. You telling me they all understeer and can't have a pointy front end?Stu wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 07:18If the nature of the regulation changes result in a car that is very front limited, there is no way that any team can construct a ‘pointy’ car that is also fast.
The role of the driver is to extract the potential of the car, which means finding the fastest way to pedal it around the track (and adapt their driving accordingly). The gap between Lando and Daniel is quite big, but the consequences of it is amplified significantly by the closeness of the grid.
I just want to point out as great as Daniels last stint with Renault was… I don’t understand why everyone thinks that Renault was a horrible --- box… i don’t think it’s fair to Renault…either way it doesn’t matter as many have mentioned these cars will be fundamentally understeery… the design of these newer generation cars just produce downforce in a much more different way than before, resulting in a less loaded front end… you would be sacrificing so much overall performance in search for a brute force loaded front end… instead of going for a radical design change, I think Daniel should try to adapt, because I do think all the cars on the grid are fundamentally the same.djos wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 07:33Sure, however I think you are vastly over simplifying the role of the driver. If it was really a case of engineers designing the fastest possible car, irrespective of driver preferences, the teams wouldn’t be investing tens of millions of dollars in “Driver In The Loop” simulators.Stu wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 07:18If the nature of the regulation changes result in a car that is very front limited, there is no way that any team can construct a ‘pointy’ car that is also fast.
The role of the driver is to extract the potential of the car, which means finding the fastest way to pedal it around the track (and adapt their driving accordingly). The gap between Lando and Daniel is quite big, but the consequences of it is amplified significantly by the closeness of the grid.
You simply can’t ignore the drivers feedback when designing a car as it’s the drivers job to extract the speed from the car.
Yes there needs to be some effort on the part of the drivers to maximise the cars potential, but when there is something fundamentally incompatible with one of your drivers, and the other driver agrees (it doesn’t matter that the other driver is able to get more speed from the car), the team needs to change the car characteristics.
You only need to look at what Daniel did with the Renault in his second year there. He was putting that car into positions on the grid most ppl didn’t think it was capable of. Why, because the team made the driving characteristic changes Daniel requested.
A lot of those classes of racing don't have open wheel aero, massively limited front ends, very limited suspension systems and a fixed rearward weight bias.runningmanz wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 08:51
If that is the case which I haven't heard definitively, I presume there are things they can do to try and compensate even if it is an inherent trait. Like changes to the suspension, front wing, ride height etc, not just playing around with the rear of the car. There is alot of classes of racing that have 18inch + wheels. You telling me they all understeer and can't have a pointy front end?.
What do we mean by the McLaren philosophy here? I'm not sure we can point to this anymore as the reason in the disparity:
This!runningmanz wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 08:51If that is the case which I haven't heard definitively, I presume there are things they can do to try and compensate even if it is an inherent trait. Like changes to the suspension, front wing, ride height etc, not just playing around with the rear of the car. There is alot of classes of racing that have 18inch + wheels. You telling me they all understeer and can't have a pointy front end?Stu wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 07:18If the nature of the regulation changes result in a car that is very front limited, there is no way that any team can construct a ‘pointy’ car that is also fast.
The role of the driver is to extract the potential of the car, which means finding the fastest way to pedal it around the track (and adapt their driving accordingly). The gap between Lando and Daniel is quite big, but the consequences of it is amplified significantly by the closeness of the grid.
Also saying the gap between Ricciardo and Lando is quite big is a bit disingenuous and using recency bias imo. Maybe on the scoreboard and a couple of tracks this year but not alot of tracks. You can remove that statement from the first 4 races. The main difference in points is Imola and some from Saudi with Dan's DNF. Those two aren't through a lack of pace either on Dan's part. It is true though that Lando has been a better and more consistent driver again so far this season overall and Dan definitely needs to improve his consistency and performance particularly in qualli.
If we want to go down that road though we could ask why has Carlos Sainz been able to adapt to McLaren quickly and not Daniel?
Sainz definitely had issues with McLaren initially though. You would expect a driver like Sainz to beat a rookie Lando relatively comfortably, but that wasn't the case.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑05 Jun 2022, 20:48If we want to go down that road though we could ask why has Carlos Sainz been able to adapt to McLaren quickly and not Daniel?
Like Daniel, Sainz was at Torro Rosso and Renault so we can assume that both drivers managed to get on top of those two car philosphies before they went to McLaren.
Like Sainz, Daniel was slow to adapt at Renault, but at McLaren Daniel immediately faced problems and is still having problems while Sainz flourished. We know It's not down to speed because both guys went against Hulkenberg and Daniel actually did the better job there.
So if my logic is correct I can say is that it's not that Lando or Carlos for that matter, has grown into the McLaren design philosophy, it's that Ricciardk just finds it difficult with that type of car. And we can say with confidence that Sainz is able to adapt to the McLaren quickly because he very likely has a bigger "driving bandwith" for adjusting the way he drives.