It couls be an opportunity, whether it's us that takes it is a big question. Going off Monza and Spa we seem to be weaker on tracks when a super low DF package is required, although hopefully the Singapore upgrade has somewhat aided this area. I am skeptical of the Monza rear wing we seem to have brought, isn't this still last year's one? I thought we would have been able to make a low drag special after main car development ended, with this race and next year Monza + Vegas in mind. Anyway, the team knows better but let's see where we stand this weekend, feels like a step into the unknown which is always exciting.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑16 Nov 2023, 22:09I'm hearing that the Vegas GP will be done under very low temperatures and whoever brings the tyres to the correct temperature will have the upper hand. If that is true it might be a big opportunity to win here considering Mclaren is the best in tyre warming.
It's the 2nd to last race of the year. Most teams are just mailing it in at this point hoping to survive on spares and used parts. If a low drag package would appear, it would only be next year.MCLvamos wrote: ↑16 Nov 2023, 22:28It couls be an opportunity, whether it's us that takes it is a big question. Going off Monza and Spa we seem to be weaker on tracks when a super low DF package is required, although hopefully the Singapore upgrade has somewhat aided this area. I am skeptical of the Monza rear wing we seem to have brought, isn't this still last year's one? I thought we would have been able to make a low drag special after main car development ended, with this race and next year Monza + Vegas in mind. Anyway, the team knows better but let's see where we stand this weekend, feels like a step into the unknown which is always exciting.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑16 Nov 2023, 22:09I'm hearing that the Vegas GP will be done under very low temperatures and whoever brings the tyres to the correct temperature will have the upper hand. If that is true it might be a big opportunity to win here considering Mclaren is the best in tyre warming.
Earlier in the year they were very good at warming tires, but if this still holds true after all the updates, that I'm not so sure we know.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑16 Nov 2023, 22:09I'm hearing that the Vegas GP will be done under very low temperatures and whoever brings the tyres to the correct temperature will have the upper hand. If that is true it might be a big opportunity to win here considering Mclaren is the best in tyre warming.
I feel the main plane is a lot bigger and drs flap smaller than other teams' Monza wing.. meaning loss of some drs effect in quali. At beginning of 2022 lot of teams had wings like this and we've moved away from them since
They could definitely make it smaller if they wanted to, but the wing they have is middle of the road for low DF, don't you think?organic wrote: ↑17 Nov 2023, 00:19I feel the main plane is a lot bigger and drs flap smaller than other teams' Monza wing.. meaning loss of some drs effect in quali. At beginning of 2022 lot of teams had wings like this and we've moved away from them since
For instance compare mcl frontal areas to alpine/Alfa/Ferrari/Williams who also have dedicated Monza wings
Anyway it's only one race.
The Ferrari is what I mean by a small main plane and a larger DRS flap: the frontal area of the mcl/Ferrari wings may be the same and top speeds similar with DRS closed but under qualifying conditions Ferrari will undoubtedly have the advantage due to DRS open topspeed being higher.mwillems wrote: ↑17 Nov 2023, 01:00They could definitely make it smaller if they wanted to, but the wing they have is middle of the road for low DF, don't you think?organic wrote: ↑17 Nov 2023, 00:19I feel the main plane is a lot bigger and drs flap smaller than other teams' Monza wing.. meaning loss of some drs effect in quali. At beginning of 2022 lot of teams had wings like this and we've moved away from them since
For instance compare mcl frontal areas to alpine/Alfa/Ferrari/Williams who also have dedicated Monza wings
Anyway it's only one race.
Ultimately they could trim the main plane and add winglets. Just looked at the Alpine and it is smaller for sure, Williams we could discuss but not here, it's hefty in the centre point and smaller going outwards so I'm not sure how much less drag it carries. I like it though, it looks really pretty
But overall we seem to be around 3rd or 4th lowest DF on the RW don't you think? Apart from Ferrari and those mentioned above, everyone else seems a reasonable amount bigger on the rear wing.
But what I mean to say is that if this is the DF they are happy to carry, I don't think the design would change much. If they wanted a lower DF wing I have no idea.
The Ferrari is interesting as they have a wing that will bring more gains under DRS.
Yeah that's definitely the case but I'm wondering also if the finer leading edge of the Ferraris DRS flap exaggerates the effect. It's curious though because I think they are the only team pushing that, certainly to that extreme. I don't have great CFD eyes to be fair, but it doesn't look like many others are doing that from what I can see. Alfas wing looks miniscule also.organic wrote: ↑17 Nov 2023, 01:05The Ferrari is what I mean by a small main plane and a larger DRS flap: the frontal area of the mcl/Ferrari wings may be the same and top speeds similar with DRS closed but under qualifying conditions Ferrari will undoubtedly have the advantage due to DRS open topspeed being higher.mwillems wrote: ↑17 Nov 2023, 01:00They could definitely make it smaller if they wanted to, but the wing they have is middle of the road for low DF, don't you think?organic wrote: ↑17 Nov 2023, 00:19
I feel the main plane is a lot bigger and drs flap smaller than other teams' Monza wing.. meaning loss of some drs effect in quali. At beginning of 2022 lot of teams had wings like this and we've moved away from them since
For instance compare mcl frontal areas to alpine/Alfa/Ferrari/Williams who also have dedicated Monza wings
Anyway it's only one race.
Ultimately they could trim the main plane and add winglets. Just looked at the Alpine and it is smaller for sure, Williams we could discuss but not here, it's hefty in the centre point and smaller going outwards so I'm not sure how much less drag it carries. I like it though, it looks really pretty
But overall we seem to be around 3rd or 4th lowest DF on the RW don't you think? Apart from Ferrari and those mentioned above, everyone else seems a reasonable amount bigger on the rear wing.
But what I mean to say is that if this is the DF they are happy to carry, I don't think the design would change much. If they wanted a lower DF wing I have no idea.
The Ferrari is interesting as they have a wing that will bring more gains under DRS.
The small drs flap of the McLaren also means you can't dump as much drag when attempting overtakes in the race. With already slim wings and minimal slipstream at low drag circuits every little bit would help
All of McLaren's other wings were modified when they made the Austria & Singapore packages so it stands to reason that perhaps the old wing specs are no longer as efficient with the new package. A different flow field will have a different optimal solution