Not to mention the low speed corners are short and full rotation, exactly how this car needs to attack the corners to behave correctly, not too much penalty there.CjC wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 17:41Agreed.mwillems wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 17:12I'm thinking we should be good for two top ten finishes at Monza, I won't be too upset if it isn't as competitive as other races have been.
I'm sure one lap pace will be better and we will then drop back in the race. But one thing we will be able to do, being faster in the corners than most cars and the two long straights both being DRS, we have a chance to utilise the slipstream and the DRS to help us not drop back too much. If everything goes smoothly it might not be too bad. But how often does it go smoothly lol
As you pointed out- Mclarens struggle to overtake at Zandvoort was due to them being weak following another car in the slow second sector.
As you have also mentioned- Monza is quite different, the corners leading up to the main overtaking point at turn 1 are high speed corners
ALSO, I haven’t heard/ seen much about this but now the fastest 5 teams on the grid are powered by Mercedes do the keyboard warriors still think the Merc is a bag of hit?
I would like your optimism.Macklaren wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 18:02Not sure why there everyone is so downbeat about Monza. We should have lined up P2/P3 on the grid here at Zandvoort, were clearly the fastest car on track at some points during the race and apart from a strategy mistake with Lando and an ill-timed safety car for Oscar, we should have had both cars in the Top-4. Yes Lando was stuck behind Yuki but neither of the Mercs or Ferraris could pass either -- such was the nature of the track. Hopefully we have the low DF rear wing and hopefuly we dont try to set up for rain and we should be decent in Monza
Turn 1 is not short nor is it advantageous.. it's also a chicane which is the corner type where McLaren has been losing most in the races to others at Hungary, spa and Zandvoortmwillems wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 17:45Not to mention the low speed corners are short and full rotation, exactly how this car needs to attack the corners to behave correctly, not too much penalty there.CjC wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 17:41Agreed.mwillems wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 17:12I'm thinking we should be good for two top ten finishes at Monza, I won't be too upset if it isn't as competitive as other races have been.
I'm sure one lap pace will be better and we will then drop back in the race. But one thing we will be able to do, being faster in the corners than most cars and the two long straights both being DRS, we have a chance to utilise the slipstream and the DRS to help us not drop back too much. If everything goes smoothly it might not be too bad. But how often does it go smoothly lol
As you pointed out- Mclarens struggle to overtake at Zandvoort was due to them being weak following another car in the slow second sector.
As you have also mentioned- Monza is quite different, the corners leading up to the main overtaking point at turn 1 are high speed corners
ALSO, I haven’t heard/ seen much about this but now the fastest 5 teams on the grid are powered by Mercedes do the keyboard warriors still think the Merc is a bag of hit?
We are just at risk of being sitting ducks on the straight and unlikely to be able to overtake anyone so if we have a mishap, we will struggle to make it up.
Yes McLaren used the old rear wing for Zandvoort quali/race. Reasoning is they didn't want to risk any more components after oscar damaged one set (knowing they want to use this wing at an upcoming race) and the weather forecast meant it wasn't such a loss.
Agreed. I do think we struggled somewhat with pace in the race - Lando was overtaken by Hamilton and couldn't keep up, it was not disastrous. I don't agree with Lando saying the pace was pretty terrible compared to Mercedes. It seems like a huge exaggeration.Macklaren wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 18:02Not sure why there everyone is so downbeat about Monza. We should have lined up P2/P3 on the grid here at Zandvoort, were clearly the fastest car on track at some points during the race and apart from a strategy mistake with Lando and an ill-timed safety car for Oscar, we should have had both cars in the Top-4. Yes Lando was stuck behind Yuki but neither of the Mercs or Ferraris could pass either -- such was the nature of the track. Hopefully we have the low DF rear wing and hopefuly we dont try to set up for rain and we should be decent in Monza
I think you've misread, there's nothing I said suggesting it was advantageous, I said it wasn't that bad for us, turn 1 and 2 can be driven each in a V profile closer to how the car likes.organic wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 18:57Turn 1 is not short nor is it advantageous.. it's also a chicane which is the corner type where McLaren has been losing most in the races to others at Hungary, spa and Zandvoortmwillems wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 17:45Not to mention the low speed corners are short and full rotation, exactly how this car needs to attack the corners to behave correctly, not too much penalty there.CjC wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 17:41
Agreed.
As you pointed out- Mclarens struggle to overtake at Zandvoort was due to them being weak following another car in the slow second sector.
As you have also mentioned- Monza is quite different, the corners leading up to the main overtaking point at turn 1 are high speed corners
ALSO, I haven’t heard/ seen much about this but now the fastest 5 teams on the grid are powered by Mercedes do the keyboard warriors still think the Merc is a bag of hit?
We are just at risk of being sitting ducks on the straight and unlikely to be able to overtake anyone so if we have a mishap, we will struggle to make it up.
In qualifying trim these corners seemed to pose no issue but the chicane T10 caused Lando to be too far behind to overtake on the back straight every lap. At spa he had the chicane at the final corner. It seems to be a car characteristic in the race.
Yes McLaren used the old rear wing for Zandvoort quali/race. Reasoning is they didn't want to risk any more components after oscar damaged one set (knowing they want to use this wing at an upcoming race) and the weather forecast meant it wasn't such a loss.
True, but we were on the slower side in a straight line and I agree even with the new wing they would've have the same issues in the chicane, but Friday at least suggested it would give them more of a change to get further alongside for a move into turn 1. So that may have helped. It was at least 4-5 times that Norris got nearly alongside Tsunoda but lacked that extra car length alongside to make a move stick. Anyway, hopefully what you discussed is a sign that the rest of the chassis is pretty efficient, and we need to bring an efficient low DF to Monza and we'll be alright (except for the slow corners)organic wrote: ↑29 Aug 2023, 00:18Everyone had 320-322 kph straight-line speed in qualifying apart from RB/Ferrari who had more (327 / 329 respectively)
Straight-line speed wasn't an issue at Zandvoort. It was slow through the chicane that meant they were often too far back to be close enough into the overtaking zones to make moves. Other cars with same top speed like Hamilton and Alonso could more easily make moves on others as they were not as slow through the chicane
Just wanted to dispel that idea that straight-line speed was a particular weakness at Zandvoort
I think it’s even worth mentioning here not the total maximum speed at the end of the straights, but the speed that the car develops already at the beginning of the straight after exiting the last turn. Lando lacked speed, because he lost several tenths at once in slow corners and did not have time to compensate for this in the third sector.organic wrote: ↑29 Aug 2023, 00:18Everyone had 320-322 kph straight-line speed in qualifying apart from RB/Ferrari who had more (327 / 329 respectively)
Straight-line speed wasn't an issue at Zandvoort. It was slow through the chicane that meant they were often too far back to be close enough into the overtaking zones to make moves. Other cars with same top speed like Hamilton and Alonso could more easily make moves on others as they were not as slow through the chicane
Just wanted to dispel that idea that straight-line speed was a particular weakness at Zandvoort
This Lando being Lando. I looked up the word, pessimist in the "pictionary" and there was Lando.CjC wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 16:56Lando’s optimism from Friday night faded fast.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/norri ... /10512867/
Also he’s fearing a bad weekend at Monza
Norris admitted that next weekend’s race at Monza could be tough for the team, with Spa having highlighted the straightline speed weakness of the MCL60.
“I think like Andrea [Stella] said there's been so much focus on trying to get the car we have now, which is the completely correct decision to have done," he said. "So much focus and time spent on creating this, there are some things we're quite far behind on.
“But I'd happily take 80% good races and 20% bad rather than vice versa. We know it, I think we admit it, which is always a good thing. We know we're probably in for a pretty tough race.
“I doubt the weather is going to be as helpful. Maybe it is, but straights are still our weakness at the minute, and we'll see what we can come up with."