Considering track evolution and it being an early run, not bad at all.
I agree - overtaking does indeed happen on the straight bits of race tracks. The engineers at McLaren have determined that the best way to get performance out of the car is to stick with a higher downforce configuration in spite of not having great aero efficiency. F1 has, for large parts of its history, been about aero efficiency and that's certainly true today. Hopefully McLaren can improve this before the summer break with their "b spec" esq upgrades.proteus wrote: ↑05 May 2023, 16:38How many overtakes are made in the corners though? I simply exposed what is my concern. You took it much too serious and by far the wrong way.Stig14 wrote: ↑05 May 2023, 10:10I disagree. McLaren were the 5th fastest team in Baku, a track which is even more dependent on straight line performance. Miami's sector 1 has a heavy reliance on medium and high speed cornering which the new floor was geared towards (according to the team). Will McLaren be relatively slow on the straights? Probably but they should also have decent cornering performance to compensate for the best overall laptime. It's daft to think that one upgrade was going to cure all of the cars problems and the team have said as much.proteus wrote: ↑05 May 2023, 09:37
So the floor is still not performing properly? This might be another weekend to forget, because they will be eaten at the straights. I dont believe cornering will be so much better to compensate enough. Especially if they have a problematic quali session and starting out of place. Lando struggled for 40 laps behind Nico, even though he was theoretically faster.
Live data can be viewed on the F1 Live Timing website, but they publish the laps afterwards via the FIA website for free.
Middle of the pack top speed-wise with such a large RW bodes well for when floor df can be sorted out completely..
That's true. All of the cars are running stiff setups, but at Miami specifically you can find time in 2 very different ways when it comes to suspension setup: run stiffer and find laptime in high speed aero-dependent sector 1, or run softer and find time with mechanical grip in sector 2. Track conditions, weather forecast and given car characteristics may also factor into which way the team chooses to go.
Thanks that was interesting.organic wrote: ↑06 May 2023, 07:29That's true. All of the cars are running stiff setups, but at Miami specifically you can find time in 2 very different ways when it comes to suspension setup: run stiffer and find laptime in high speed aero-dependent sector 1, or run softer and find time with mechanical grip in sector 2. Track conditions, weather forecast and given car characteristics may also factor into which way the team chooses to go.
Last year for instance RB went heavily towards the soft setup whereas Ferrari went far towards stiff; in the race whilst they ran similar laptimes there was often 0.5s swing between their s1/s2 times.
McLaren are 2nd best performers in s1 and lose 6 tenths in sector 2.. making me feel they are taking this idea of running stiffer at Miami to an extreme
https://preview.redd.it/vl60z74lt4ya1.j ... 3a20487d2b