Vanja #66 wrote: ↑14 Sep 2024, 21:52
mwillems wrote: ↑14 Sep 2024, 21:32
Yes. In return I was arguing that the fundamental issue with the Mclaren was the front of the car and the rear wing being run was a result of the need to load the front, therefore the RW wouldn't start to reduce until the front was providing stable load in across a range of conditions, since they appeared to be compensating for poor operating windows by increasing load at the front.
This was across the first 5 or so races until Miami.
I don't think their rear wings were too big in any event this year, not even before Miami. They had in general good balance overall and seemed like good downforce level every time. Just the concpet of Bahrain and Jeddah wings included lower flap angle and therefore lower DRS delta than RB and (as of this year) Ferrari and I was surprised they missed the trick at the time.
It turned out they were considerably slower on straight only in Bahrain Q and it definitely remains a complete outlier race for McLaren this season. In any case, Spa and Zandvoort wings now feature this bigger DRS delta, while Monaco and Barcelona wings (introduced last year) also have this feature since both wings already have massive camber and overall angle
Bahrain was a really weird race for McLaren. Just comparing Lando's laps in the last stint against Carlos (the faster Ferrari), he was pretty much losing 0.2s out of the last corner, every single lap. Something was off with the car there, perhaps they were blindsided by previous data and went down the wrong direction with the setup, but it's highly unlikely considering all the testing they do there so who knows really.
It did paint a really bleak picture for them though, because after Bahrain I really never would have expected McLaren to catch up with RedBull & Ferrari. In the subsequent races they showed much better pace. Saudi already was a big improvement but it was hidden somewhat by their atrocious straight-line speed and DRS delta which meant Oscar was stuck behind Lewis for a great portion of the race. Clear air pace at Saudi though, showed them to be much closer to Ferrari than Bahrain had suggested and this was enforced somewhat by Australia, Japan and China.
At the end of the day, the DRS "trick" really is no trick at all. It works exactly as one would expect it to. Bigger upper flap, means more downforce + drag when wing is closed, which leads to more speed gained once the wing is opened.
I doubt they would miss something this obvious, but there must have been some sort of limitation or difficulty running the car with a large(r) flap angle at the rear. I can't think of anything that would limit them to run with a bigger flap though. The way I see it, the beam wing is also used as a tool to manage the rear downforce. If the initial spec car could not handle too much rear downforce for balance reasons, couldn't they have just made the flaps bigger and compensate by running more conservative beam wings?