Taking centre stage in front of an audience of F1’s greatest names – including former World Champion driver Mika Häkkinen, McLaren Racing CEO Zac Brown and driver-turned-pundit Mark Webber – the pair discussed the future of Newey’s career both on and away from the Formula 1 track.
The candid conversation moderated by Newey’s good friend and manager Eddie Jordan, delved into Newey’s remarkable F1 career, why he chose Oyster to build his dream 90-foot-long 885 sailing yacht and approached the obvious and hot question of the minute – “What's next?”
One thing of interest is how the Red Bull is scrubbing speed slowly on entry to turn one. This is something the McLaren used to do pre-upgrade, but hasn't done for the past few races. It wasn't clipping for the Mclaren and I figured they were scrubbing speed due to not wanting to do too much braking into the corners.Emag wrote: ↑19 May 2024, 22:29Difficult to gauge performance in medium & low speed corners. Was looking at the telemetry of some laps, and at times Lando is gaining on those sections, and at times he loses out quite a bit to Leclerc. I guess it depends on tire condition and how well the driver is driving the lap, but in qualifying, both cars had the edge over Leclerc.
Just trying to get a small glimpse on what to expect from Monaco, but with setups being so much different is impossible to know what's gonna happen. A significant part of the track has corners at <100 kmh though. In Miami the car was surprisingly good in the slow section, but going by past references, it should be RedBull's and Ferrari's track on paper.
Fastest at certain points, for sure. Not fastest across the whole of two weekends. We are without a doubt the fastest on harder tyres I'd say.
FittingMechanics wrote: ↑19 May 2024, 20:53Now let's go get some great starting positions in Indy 500.
3 McLaren drivers in Fast 12.
P4, P5, P8 and P15. Not bad at all.mclaren111 wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 11:20FittingMechanics wrote: ↑19 May 2024, 20:53Now let's go get some great starting positions in Indy 500.
3 McLaren drivers in Fast 12.
Yeah, Monaco will be another niche test, specifically of mechanical grip and trail braking. As you stated, when we can focus on a certain type of corner in our setup, we excel. In the FIA Car Notification documents the team have, I think, started to refer to this now as isochronal and non-isochronal circuits. On face value at these isochronal circuits we look to be the fastest car in some circumstances. Elsewhere, less so, but not far behind.Emag wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 11:20Lando has said in the post race interview that their weakness in low speed corners appears only when they have to setup the car for a track which has both high speed and low speed so they end up with compromises there to boost their strengths. However in a track like Monaco, the car is setup differently and he mentioned they have "Monaco-specific" parts and he believed the others should have too. Asked on what he thought about the weekend there, he said just ask us after Friday, because it's hard to make a prediction with how things stand now.
Still, at Miami, we struggled on the softs in Q and won despite that issue as the SC helped get us back up the order. Here at Imola, a more competitive race pace on the medium compound would probably have seen us win the race. So still, there is something about tyre temps that we need to work on to better balance how we heat and cool them and whilst bolting on more DF always helps, it looks to be a separate technical issue in its own right.mwillems wrote: ↑19 May 2024, 18:32We look to be equal overall with Red Bull. It will come.
Over the next few races the competitive picture will begin to sharpen up.
Monaco will see the team benefit like China and Miami, with a very focused setup which releases the car from some of its weak points.
Rob Marshall, Peter Prod, Zak are just a couple of people that Newey knows very well. And he imo can be easily implemented in our structure... He would be the support to both Rob and Peter and supplying them with "gold dust"FittingMechanics wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 09:56I'm watching that interview with Newey - and that slip up about Zak is really interesting. It genuinely looks like a slip up but who knows with Jordan. This is just the type of stuff that he would do.
But thinking about it, maybe just maybe Newey sees McLaren as an interesting prospect. The team is racing in couple of different categories, they have a road car division and the fans are not super aggressive like Tifosi.
And I think it is clear that Newey will continue somewhere.
Maybe the slipup was because Zak was in the audience.Taking centre stage in front of an audience of F1’s greatest names – including former World Champion driver Mika Häkkinen, McLaren Racing CEO Zac Brown and driver-turned-pundit Mark Webber – the pair discussed the future of Newey’s career both on and away from the Formula 1 track.
The candid conversation moderated by Newey’s good friend and manager Eddie Jordan, delved into Newey’s remarkable F1 career, why he chose Oyster to build his dream 90-foot-long 885 sailing yacht and approached the obvious and hot question of the minute – “What's next?”
Initially I thought no way, he will go to Ferrari but now I am not so sure.genarro wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 13:20Rob Marshall, Peter Prod, Zak are just a couple of people that Newey knows very well. And he imo can be easily implemented in our structure... He would be the support to both Rob and Peter and supplying them with "gold dust"
Plus McLaren has an indy team, FE team and are interested in WEC...it's not that far fetched
When you consider the fact that Red Bull have been gaining the experience of regularly winning since 2021, you can see that this is an incredibly valuable time for McLaren F1 and our drivers and race engineers. The lap times and the inconsistency of them show what a battle it was at Imola with those tyres in these temperatures. Sounds like a little more experience for the engineers at the track (and on the simulators back at Woking) would have given a good opportunity to win here. The setups for the race were suboptimal producing too much oversteer.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 13:38This is a great read from Norris and his race management. Great skills, commendable understanding of tyres. Won't quote anything, the whole article must be read to comprehend it
https://www.racefans.net/2024/05/20/nor ... erstappen/
I've been a diehard fan of McLaren since 1998 so I'm a little biased but nevertheless... I dont get the whole Ferrari is F1 and F1 is Ferrari and the myth of the team and other nonsense... McLaren has the same ilustrious history.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 13:28Initially I thought no way, he will go to Ferrari but now I am not so sure.genarro wrote: ↑20 May 2024, 13:20Rob Marshall, Peter Prod, Zak are just a couple of people that Newey knows very well. And he imo can be easily implemented in our structure... He would be the support to both Rob and Peter and supplying them with "gold dust"
Plus McLaren has an indy team, FE team and are interested in WEC...it's not that far fetched
McLaren does have some benefits. No need to move to Italy, less pressure from the fans and the rest is pretty similar to Ferrari with the exception of working with Hamilton and mythical Ferrari history. But then again, McLaren has some history as well.