And we were doing so well for a while there. Time for this again:Pierce89 wrote:I wasn't talking about lap time. I specifically mentioned top speed. The previous quote was about how little drag the Maclaren has. So I just asked why, if the Macca has so little drag, the Merc is quicker on top end. Speaking about drag only.
http://bigmsmallcbigl.com/
As to the rest of it, the amount of absolute drag or the absolute downforce on their own don't tell you enough.
The point is aerodynamic efficiency, how much downforce generated for a given amount of drag, and vice versa. It is therefore the plot of those two lines, and a calculated local maximum when fed through the simulator, that determines how any car will be configured.
You could certainly imagine a scooped-out, low-drag car body shape which then allows you to add significantly more wing than you otherwise would, such that you may in fact lose a little time on the straight, be middling in the speed traps, but gain back what you lost plus much, much, more in the corners, just because of where the radiators allowed you to shift the plots.
Saying low-drag or high-downforce without context is pointless, it is the combination and the efficiency of that combination that determines performance.
... I don't know, but from the vibe I got, I do not believe that McLaren had an "aero efficient" low downforce wing configuration available to them, trimming wings lost them more than they stood to gain, for them the numbers insisted on a barn door as the most efficient method for that car to circulate that lap.
When you then further muddy the water with tyre performance interactions from any chosen aero-load, good or bad, or from winter design decisions to bias DRS for qualification or race performance, or anything-else from the usual gaggle of omnipresent overlapping compromises that define any set-up ... then it rapidly becomes way too simplistic to say that a low drag radiator body shape must always automatically be at the top of the speed-traps ... it might, and it might not, you can't tell.