mwillems wrote: ↑05 Sep 2023, 21:17
Emag wrote: ↑05 Sep 2023, 19:53
I was just reminiscing in our past history, and I feel like this trait with qualifying pace being better than race pace is somewhat of a "tradition" for McLaren. It could very well be that we have had amazing drivers in our lineups and they have pulled magical laps for qualifying flattering the car. But even in our last real competitive year (2012), McLaren, especially in the first half of the season, was much faster in qualifying relatively speaking compared to their race pace.
Edit :
Just came back from Italy after attending my first ever Formula 1 GP and I got to feel like a kid again haha. Started watching some old races that I remember ignited my love for the sport years back. It might not have been the best race to attend as a McLaren fan, but Monza was the most accessible one for me this year, and I enjoyed it either way. I would have loved Hungary's race this year with Lando's podium, but sadly, the timing was a bit off for me. Hope to catch Hungary in the future.
Where did you get to watch from?? Anything you noticed about how the car handled?
Incidentally where did you travel from initially?
You seem right about Qualy pace, we did trend towards one lap wonders either on pace or just plain unreliable in the race if we were fast in both
I got to watch from Ascari, but since mine was a general admission ticket, I had to pretty much give up sleep to queue up very early in the morning to get a seat on that area for the race. It was worth it though.
In terms of car handling, it's difficult to tell honestly, because all of the cars are really really fast on track. But through Ascari, McLaren seemed to drive through effortlessly and with less sliding compared to Williams (which was the closest reference for most of the race unfortunately, together with Mercedes). Initially, Mercedes didn't seem better, but I have to say towards the end of the race, it seemed like Lewis had more grip.
Ferrari also seemed to be sliding there a lot, but I guess it's to be expected with them having to push the tires the whole race. Max on the other hand, was almost always smooth as butter through there. You could barely see any movement from the RedBull, it was impressive. With fresh tires, McLaren was similar through there, but they couldn't keep it for the entire stint.
I travelled from Albania, which is a very small country in the balkans, east of Italy across the mediterranean sea.