Mark Webber on Coulthard and Jordans podcast
So you are forcing me to quote Stella:Emag wrote: ↑05 Sep 2024, 22:14It is Andrea Stella who says they were worried they would hit the same road-block Mercedes & Ferrari hit though. I do not concern myself with clickbait titles.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑05 Sep 2024, 21:50I think they are just thorough. Why rush things? You spend money making them and then if it doesn't work you lost that money. The upgrade path with bigger packages insteaf of trickling it in is obviously working.
Don't worry about journalists taking things out of context and pushing narratives. If anything it says the team has more aces in their sleeve.
I read the articles that are interesting to me and draw my own conclusions.
In the team stream during Monza weekend they said that the new rear wing was really meant for Baku and that they will run Spa wing in Monza as that is what the data showed.
Andrew Jarvis
August 30th, 2024 13:23
Obviously, Monza is famous for its long straights, which makes it a low drag circuit, so understanding our rear wing choices is going to be important too. We’ve got two versions with us: there is the low-downforce rear wing that was introduced for Spa, and an ultra-low downforce version being introduced here that may also be useful in Baku and Las Vegas.
I mean, of course he will say “might”, nobody knows what happens until it happens. It’s pretty clear they have had issues with the development plan though, I don’t see how you can conclude anything else. If you had a plan and you don’t stick to it because you think there might be problems if you go on with that plan, then that’s not good.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 09:26So you are forcing me to quote Stella:Emag wrote: ↑05 Sep 2024, 22:14It is Andrea Stella who says they were worried they would hit the same road-block Mercedes & Ferrari hit though. I do not concern myself with clickbait titles.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑05 Sep 2024, 21:50I think they are just thorough. Why rush things? You spend money making them and then if it doesn't work you lost that money. The upgrade path with bigger packages insteaf of trickling it in is obviously working.
Don't worry about journalists taking things out of context and pushing narratives. If anything it says the team has more aces in their sleeve.
I read the articles that are interesting to me and draw my own conclusions.
“But there's a reason why we haven't brought some upgrades – because we see that, had we pressed the go button, we might have had some doubts when these parts were tested full-scale on the real car.
“So we are taking our time to convince ourself that the development is mature to be taken trackside.”
Emphasis (bold) mine. To me this reads not as worrying but as being smart and prudent with the developments. They will exhaust simulation options and "low hanging fruit" in the development BEFORE making the parts and bringing it to the car.
It doesn't say they are sure they would hit problems, it does not say they are worried, it says they are not pushing updates as fast as possible as they want them to be rock solid. And to me all that makes sense and is obviously working.
I know people tend to be cautious but in a situation where McLaren looks to be fastest, all upgrades work as intended when they bring them to the car, why the doom and gloom?
But there were several updates since Miami, in last three races for example.Emag wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 09:50I mean, of course he will say “might”, nobody knows what happens until it happens. It’s pretty clear they have had issues with the development plan though, I don’t see how you can conclude anything else. If you had a plan and you don’t stick to it because you think there might be problems if you go on with that plan, then that’s not good.
They have the luxury of being in a position where their main competitors fumbled and have been wasting time fixing things. If any of them had successful developments, you wouldn’t be saying this, instead you would be complaining.
In an alternate universe people would be asking why hasn’t there been a major upgrade since Miami when competitors have brought 2-3 and now McLaren is at the bottom of the leading group?
And it’s not like they have been dominating races anyway even if the car has been good enough to win more times than they have. They need a straightforward race to win with the current maturity of the pitwall, so obviously a faster car would help. They are not withholding upgrades because they can, they are withholding them because they have been unsure about their effect on the car.
There is no doom and gloom as I see it to be honest. Just discussing the meaning of latest words by Stella and the possible impact their issues might have. I just don’t agree with the view that there is absolutely nothing wrong with what he has said. Definitely something has been a little bit off with the development plan this year. How impactful it might be medium to long term, we can’t really know at this point.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 09:57But there were several updates since Miami, in last three races for example.Emag wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 09:50I mean, of course he will say “might”, nobody knows what happens until it happens. It’s pretty clear they have had issues with the development plan though, I don’t see how you can conclude anything else. If you had a plan and you don’t stick to it because you think there might be problems if you go on with that plan, then that’s not good.
They have the luxury of being in a position where their main competitors fumbled and have been wasting time fixing things. If any of them had successful developments, you wouldn’t be saying this, instead you would be complaining.
In an alternate universe people would be asking why hasn’t there been a major upgrade since Miami when competitors have brought 2-3 and now McLaren is at the bottom of the leading group?
And it’s not like they have been dominating races anyway even if the car has been good enough to win more times than they have. They need a straightforward race to win with the current maturity of the pitwall, so obviously a faster car would help. They are not withholding upgrades because they can, they are withholding them because they have been unsure about their effect on the car.
In Spa they brought low downforce package, something they did not have last year (rear wing, beam wing, rear brake duct)
In Zaandvoort they brought new front brake scoop, revised front suspension, revised floor edge, modified rear suspension and new high downforce rear wing and beam wing (making older one obsolete).
In Monza they brought new front brake duct, new front wing flap and new sidepod shape.
They also brought a new ultra low drag wing in Monza but didn't use it. These types of updates are similar in scope to most updates other teams bring, exception being Ferrari with their Monza special.
Ofcourse if the team was slow, we would be more critical. My point is why the doom and gloom if the team is taking more time to mature the updates when things are clearly working? Things they bring are good and bring performance. I think that we will see a shift toward McLaren style development with bigger updates but more spread out, because teams are realizing the cars are so complex that trickling things in is risky.
It's an odd thing I noted at the time, because Baku requires more DF than Monza, so I'm interested to see what they run.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 09:27In the team stream during Monza weekend they said that the new rear wing was really meant for Baku and that they will run Spa wing in Monza as that is what the data showed.
Found the quote from FP1 by Jarvis.Andrew Jarvis
August 30th, 2024 13:23
Obviously, Monza is famous for its long straights, which makes it a low drag circuit, so understanding our rear wing choices is going to be important too. We’ve got two versions with us: there is the low-downforce rear wing that was introduced for Spa, and an ultra-low downforce version being introduced here that may also be useful in Baku and Las Vegas.