Well, the middle isn't changed that much and nose is very similar to one used on 4/19.
That long dragon tail intrigues me a lot
Not looking good at all. And somebody still dared to say it is Mclaren's decision whether Kimi stays or not."I wasn't expecting anything before I came, and I knew we have issues with certain things, but we're going to get there and there will be some improvement," Raikkonen told Autosport.
"The biggest part of the problem is the engine, but things are happening and in the coming weeks we'll improve it," he added. "They (Mercedes) are not where they should be and need to improve. On the engine side we've got a lot of work to do."
True, but the problems Mercedes and Mclaren are facing aren't a consequence of a concious choice, but rather mistakes in manufacturing, materials and car servicing. In other words quality control. This has been known for a long time, but no impovement has been made.DaveKillens wrote:My personal opinion is that Mclaren did make the correct risk\speed decisions, but fell short because of just poor luck, some shoddy driving by Juan, and Renault's flawless mid-season strategy.
I believe they had their biggest recall in their history in 2004, around 2.3 million cars. Most of the culprit has been the E-Class. Mercedes (along with Volkswagen and Audi) rank near the bottom of the J.G. Initial Quality reports.peroa wrote:They have or had quite some problems on the electronics side.ginsu wrote:BTW, Merc builds notoriously unreliable road cars. Supposedly, every Merc has at least a couple of bugs when they're brand new.
But didn`t it get better the last couple of years?
Fair comment and a pretty good assessment IMHO. I would add that Mercedes Ilmor made hard work of it all with all those lost grid places when the had to change engines before the race. Maybe you don't just blame Mercedes? Perhaps there were installation issues that helped the demise of so many engines?DaveKillens wrote:In racing,you can build a 100% reliable car, but it won't win any races through sheer pace. Or you can build a very quick car, but most likely to fail many times.
The idea is to balance risk against performance, something all teams do. Obviously Mclaren have been leaning towards performance more than reliability. Just the opposite was Renault mid season last year, where they made the decision to be reliable.
Although we all know the outcome of last year's races, Mclaren came oh-so-close to winning it all. But for a few mishaps (for instance Kimi's suspension failing on the last lap, or JPM's tennis injury, or his habit of collecting backmarkers) it is possible McLaren may have won both the manufacturer's and driver's title. My personal opinion is that Mclaren did make the correct risk\speed decisions, but fell short because of just poor luck, some shoddy driving by Juan, and Renault's flawless mid-season strategy.