It's possibly something to do with the way the car is able to handle pitch and yaw throughout the entirety of those corners. Rob Marhsall please give us the secrets of the Red Bull suspension!MrGapes wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 17:25this is why I had tempered my expectations...
Whilst drag is a big issue that isn't the fundamental problem in my opinion.
- The car is very different on heavy fuel... the cars are heavily reliant on the mechanical and aerodynamic grip produced by the car. In qualifying the new softs provide additional grip which mask a lot of the fundamental aero and mechanical inefficiencies. The McLaren as the telemetry suggest struggles during off throttle and late braking phases in medium to low speed producing understeer.. when the car has more fuel you are off throttle for larger chunk of the lap thus the overall time loss grows.
Maybe why the car seemed to go well in a wet Monaco? More gentle pitch and yaw movement means the aero platform is more stable.mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 19:00It's possibly something to do with the way the car is able to handle pitch and yaw throughout the entirety of those corners. Rob Marhsall please give us the secrets of the Red Bull suspension!MrGapes wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 17:25this is why I had tempered my expectations...
Whilst drag is a big issue that isn't the fundamental problem in my opinion.
- The car is very different on heavy fuel... the cars are heavily reliant on the mechanical and aerodynamic grip produced by the car. In qualifying the new softs provide additional grip which mask a lot of the fundamental aero and mechanical inefficiencies. The McLaren as the telemetry suggest struggles during off throttle and late braking phases in medium to low speed producing understeer.. when the car has more fuel you are off throttle for larger chunk of the lap thus the overall time loss grows.
I'm sure it is a mix of many things. Wet weather reduces the top speed deficiency we have, helps us pronounce the cars benefit of warming the tyres up more easily. I suspect the Aero is better when it is slower and more stable and it also allows drivers to make much more of a difference. I'm sure there are other reasons to do with the way the car works but those types of situations do come to us. I'm not sure how the car was today as our representative driver didn't have a clear opportunity to push an undamaged car in race spec.Peter Piper wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 19:52Maybe why the car seemed to go well in a wet Monaco? More gentle pitch and yaw movement means the aero platform is more stable.mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 19:00It's possibly something to do with the way the car is able to handle pitch and yaw throughout the entirety of those corners. Rob Marhsall please give us the secrets of the Red Bull suspension!MrGapes wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 17:25this is why I had tempered my expectations...
Whilst drag is a big issue that isn't the fundamental problem in my opinion.
- The car is very different on heavy fuel... the cars are heavily reliant on the mechanical and aerodynamic grip produced by the car. In qualifying the new softs provide additional grip which mask a lot of the fundamental aero and mechanical inefficiencies. The McLaren as the telemetry suggest struggles during off throttle and late braking phases in medium to low speed producing understeer.. when the car has more fuel you are off throttle for larger chunk of the lap thus the overall time loss grows.
Yeah, it's either that or we're essentially left with Next Year.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 22:50All hope is now left to the new B-Spec Car that is gonna be introduced.
Wasn’t the Baku update supposed to be B-spec? The only B-spec I have seen this year is the Mercedes. And it did Mercedes very good.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 22:50All hope is now left to the new B-Spec Car that is gonna be introduced.
I think it’s mostly aerodynamic related, it doesn’t help that the cologne wind tunnel can’t simulate yaw.mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 19:00It's possibly something to do with the way the car is able to handle pitch and yaw throughout the entirety of those corners. Rob Marhsall please give us the secrets of the Red Bull suspension!MrGapes wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 17:25this is why I had tempered my expectations...
Whilst drag is a big issue that isn't the fundamental problem in my opinion.
- The car is very different on heavy fuel... the cars are heavily reliant on the mechanical and aerodynamic grip produced by the car. In qualifying the new softs provide additional grip which mask a lot of the fundamental aero and mechanical inefficiencies. The McLaren as the telemetry suggest struggles during off throttle and late braking phases in medium to low speed producing understeer.. when the car has more fuel you are off throttle for larger chunk of the lap thus the overall time loss grows.
There is no B-Spec. The days that teams could afford a B-Spec have come and gone with the CAP.McL-H wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 23:23Wasn’t the Baku update supposed to be B-spec? The only B-spec I have seen this year is the Mercedes. And it did Mercedes very good.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 22:50All hope is now left to the new B-Spec Car that is gonna be introduced.
Just my opinion and happy to be proved wrong but I don't think the issues on the MCL60 are entirely due to the deficiencies of the Cologne wind tunnel. They have had a number of years using it to know what it can and cannot do.MrGapes wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:55I think it’s mostly aerodynamic related, it doesn’t help that the cologne wind tunnel can’t simulate yaw.mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 19:00It's possibly something to do with the way the car is able to handle pitch and yaw throughout the entirety of those corners. Rob Marhsall please give us the secrets of the Red Bull suspension!MrGapes wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 17:25this is why I had tempered my expectations...
Whilst drag is a big issue that isn't the fundamental problem in my opinion.
- The car is very different on heavy fuel... the cars are heavily reliant on the mechanical and aerodynamic grip produced by the car. In qualifying the new softs provide additional grip which mask a lot of the fundamental aero and mechanical inefficiencies. The McLaren as the telemetry suggest struggles during off throttle and late braking phases in medium to low speed producing understeer.. when the car has more fuel you are off throttle for larger chunk of the lap thus the overall time loss grows.