Well that would make sense wouldn't it – the point U pods is to make the beam wing and rear wing more efficient.raymondu999 wrote:Actually I've been thinking of this; summing up Shrieker and beelsebob's points. Shrieker says that the majority of RBR downforce is very efficient, low-drag downforce from the underfloor and beelsebob is saying that in high downforce trim the McLaren is now the more efficient car (in terms of how much drag it needs to produce its downforce). Coupled together; the only logical conclusion is that the RBR rear wing is very inefficient, no?
Except that we're not discussing the traditional mantra, we're discussing what you can observe from recent races, and what this implies for the performance of different bits of the car. The bottom line is that the McLaren is faster at high downforce tracks – this means they have a more efficient high downforce setup (at least with the new "Suzuka" rear wing).Javert wrote:Anyway, I thought the opposite of you about MP4-26: a car that has a "total" DF (with DRS closed ) greater than RB7, but much less efficient (given the Mercedes HPs and the performances in Valencia, SPA, Monza)
EDIT: much less efficient and with more fuel needed to do a race!
Agreed, hence why I'm not really convinced that the RB diffuser is the magic bullet that everyone claims it to be.raymondu999 wrote:All good points beelsebob - but so was the shrink-wrapping of the RB rear (designed to clean airflow)
Yep, that's a really good point – they seem much more able than the other teams to get the tyres to the right temp and keep them there.raymondu999 wrote:IMO the gains McLaren have made this year are largely due to tyres. They seem to, since Germany, have unlocked the Pirellis a lot. They can switch them on quick; even the hardest Pirellis; they can maintain heat in the tyres and seemingly not overheat them; and get the maximum out of them. But again this is only conjecture.
An interesting point there – in a couple of races last year button switched early from inters to slicks and immediately got good lap times out of them... I wonder if the -25 exhibited a similar property, it was just less apparent due to the tyres being easier to work with.raymondu999 wrote:In Canada; Valencia; Nurburgring (excluding the anomalous Silverstone) we saw that the McLaren could heat their tyres very quickly - in Valencia overly so. In Canada it meant that JB could be instantly on it as his tyres were just on song immediately in the drying conditions. I was convinced this would have meant overheating in the hot races; but we haven't seen that either. We've just basically seen a McLaren that seems to be unable to do any wrong to their tyres.
Were there not reports earlier in the year that Mclaren hired tyre engineers from Bridgestone and they've helped them improve tyre usage massively?
Been saying that since Turkey, and was solidified in Singapore. The RB7 has been gambled to do its maximum in qualifying (with unlimited DRS) to stay out in front, with the other factor of tire strategy keeping it out in front.kalinka wrote:+1 for all above.
I think there's another aspect of the whole story : I think RB7's success this year is lying almost only in qualy. I think it's not a coincidence, it's designed that way, and that's the thing that other teams including McL didn't consider seriously enough. Even after few races almost everyone (including me, and majority on F1 forums ) thougth that in 2011 qualy wouldn't be so important with Pirellis. What we saw is the total opposite. I didn't say RB wouldn't win races without pole positions, but it was indeed a very important factor.
McL is better with tyres for sure, and maybe Newey's idea was that if they stay always in front, with their good DF, it doesnt matter that there's a few cars there with better race pace. And he was right. I mean look at Webber, he qualyfies down a few places, and there you go...almost every time he was out of contention for win. The whole RB car is made to get away from pole, I mean they even sacrifice KERS for that in the beginning...any opinions on that? Should McL design the MP4-27 for a qualy car next year?