MrGapes wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:55
mwillems wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 19:00
MrGapes wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 17:25
this 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.
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!
I think it’s mostly aerodynamic related, it doesn’t help that the cologne wind tunnel can’t simulate yaw.
One silver bullet in this formula is having the car as flat to the ground and as low to the ground throughout the lap. Anyone can do it will get a substantial boost to their consistent aero.
If Mclaren could do it, for instance, we could run a lot less wing, have a more consistent and driveable car and be faster on the straight.
Everything is interrelated on these cars, more than it ever was before. Suspension and the floor are the 2 most important aspects of the car.
Edit: Suspension, floor AND tyres. If I recall, the team have already identified part of their longstanding handling and feel issue is related to the way the tyres behave and deform.