In order to change topics a bit, I was curious about how much progress McLaren made year on year with the MCL60… A comparison of their best laps for both Pre-Season testing at Bahrain in 2022 and 2023 is probably a moot exercise, since a lot of variables could drive the wrong conclusion (track temp, wind, fuel loads, etc)… But both laps were done in the C3 tire in the last day of testing of each year… A better analysis would be using Qualifying this weekend, but may shed some ideas or at least start a different conversation than the one we have been plagued with until then.
Orange trace: 2022 MCL36
White trace: 2023 MCL60
Mini Sectors difference:
Interesting to note that the MCL36 seems to have better corner exit compared to the MCL60, nevertheless is also important to note that the MCL60 is faster ultimately on the straights… Maybe a sign of better drag compared to last year? Change in deployment strategies?
It’s also important to note that the MCL60 is clearly faster in every corner, not only is it faster on the straights leading to them, it is also faster during the corner itself, which means that braking is also improved in the MCL60 as well as overall corner speed.
Telemetry:
We can see that the MCL60 has more top speed than the MCL36, also we can notice the difference in minimum speed on most of the corners with a clear exception in the last corner of the lap.
Norris with the MCL60 was clearly able to brake later on almost every corner, even when carrying more speed towards it… While acceleration out of the corner is better on the MCL36
Finally and also for the sake of discussion, I did the same comparison between the fastest lap in Testing 2023 and the Bahrain GP Qualifying… Similar traces with White been the 2023 test and orange the qualifying lap.
Interestingly, a similar situation as when compared to testing where the MCL36 is faster exiting the corners while the MCL60 is faster from the middle to the end of the straight… Maybe corroborating the fact that the MCL60 has shed some drag for 2023… It is even more interesting when one considers that the MCL36 was driven with the list possible amount of fuel, with a very much rubbered in track and with the engine and deployment at maximum settings.
The MCL60 was faster through the lap with the exception of the last corner where it loses a tenth compared to the MCL36, but we can also see how the MCL60 has better cornering speed even when comparing a hot lap in testing versus a qualifying lap