Mostlyeels wrote: ↑09 Nov 2023, 07:57
Interesting that they're quoted saying that the underfloor and rear wing (and a little bit the front wing) are the big areas that improved the car, but no mention of the sidepods (less important, but still a little misdirection?) Also, is my auto translator correct that Verstappen's saying McLaren are better not riding the curbs? Very interesting as well that they had plenty of leeway on the ride height in Brazil, implication being they're really on top of the floor design and effects.
I know that Stella said that you can dial out some of the cars issues with ride height, or at least move the issues elsewhere. I guess that if your car is quite low then you'd have to be careful with kerbs. He also said that it moves the unpredictability into the high speed corners.
It's interesting because it frames both as an Aero issue that is triggered by mechanical behaviour of the car (Floor pitch and yaw relative to the track). It does sound like the floor doesn't maintain consistent performance through all corners in a given setup i.e it loses downforce and in lower speed corners may be stalling entirely. If you think about inconsistent Aero through the corners you will struggle to have the car pointing where you need it to point even when accelerating away which we saw in greater extremes in Austin. The car needs to be settled and not jumpy.
Speaking anecdotally, the RB is a car that also needs to be run low and if I recall correctly also a little firmer, hence it struggled at Singapore and lost some of it's advantage at Austin due to having been forced into a different setup due to bumps. It was also notable that these issues were more prevalent on lower fuel runs (Qualy) than race although some of that is because the car is better in race than Qualy anyway, I'm not sure how much that parallel works but it's interesting to consider it when looking at the MCL60s own issues and behaviours which seem in some part similar. Also anecdotally, the RB runs with more wing than us now on several occasions this season. I do wonder if this is part of the solution to managing the stability of the car. Can you run with a little softer suspension setup to benefit the kerbs and small bumps but more wing to keep the car pinned down once you get above the very lowest of speeds?
Anyway, you'd think that there is a nice gain to be had from creating a car that is able to be perpendicular to the floor more than it is now, and one would assume that in doing that it would also help in high energy braking zones too. So all in all it feels like there is plenty of gains for the start of the season.