There is one thing I can't understand
McLaren sidepods were called "L-shaped sidepods", with "U-shaped sidepods" referring (I think) to other teams sidepods
Now you call the McLaren sidepods "U sidepods" ... WTF?
I wholeheartedly disagree. No one understands the tyres the best. RedBull are just using the tyres on the limit that's all. They are clearly the fastest car, I don't buy that lacking race pace crap. There is no real evidence to show that. and that is for the redbull thread anyway.kalinka wrote:Nice to see that puzzles are falling in place now. I thought (and said on this forum ) before season start,that McL will be good with tyres. They have all the experience they need. Remember, they switched tyre manufacturer from Bridgestons to Michelin and back in last 10 years. They had done this before, and they know exactly what they need to do in that situation. Ferrari stayed with Bridgestons, though I'm not convinced their problem is inexperience. Sauber is a bit of mystery, maybe they just hit that sweet spot unaware of it, maybe they just have better engineers there than other teams.Intego wrote:McL and Sauber are the team that have understood the Pirellis at its best.
What is more interesting for me, what'll happen now >
Can McL tweak the MP4-26 for the reamining races to be good at qualy and race too ?
Are the two requirements excluding somewhat each other (race pace vs. qualy-pace ) ?
Did they consider to go with RBR and build a qualy-car from MP4-27, concentrating less on the race pace ?
If Sauber got the knack of the Pirelli, then Ferrari would have known it as well.....don't forget that Sauber is Ferrari's unofficial B team.n smikle wrote:McL and Sauber are the team that have understood the Pirellis at its best.
Let me put clear what I mean. RB isn't lacking race pace, but there's a significant gap in qualy over every other team, and it's not present at race pace. While @McL it's the opposite. Wheather that race pace is better or worst as McLaren's is irrelevant somewhat. McL never could reach that qualy pace, and sometimes it can reach RB's race pace and sometimes even more, sometimes worse. So my points are those few questions at the end of my previous post. That's what I think is most interesting now regarding McLaren. I don't want to quote myself.n smikle wrote: I wholeheartedly disagree. No one understands the tyres the best. RedBull are just using the tyres on the limit that's all. They are clearly the fastest car, I don't buy that lacking race pace crap. There is no real evidence to show that. and that is for the redbull thread anyway.
Well, in the case of Sauber this is mitigated by a big lack of speed. And in fact they may not understand the tyres better than the top teams at all, because whatever they are doing now may very well not work if there was more efficient downforce on the car. Everything is a compromise.raymondu999 wrote:Both are the best able to keep tyres, don't forget
Well I disagree with youn smikle wrote:I wholeheartedly disagree. No one understands the tyres the best. RedBull are just using the tyres on the limit that's all. They are clearly the fastest car, I don't buy that lacking race pace crap. There is no real evidence to show that. and that is for the redbull thread anyway.
Javert wrote:There is one thing I can't understand
McLaren sidepods were called "L-shaped sidepods", with "U-shaped sidepods" referring (I think) to other teams sidepods
Now you call the McLaren sidepods "U sidepods" ... WTF?
They allways run gurneys on the fw....beelsebob wrote:McLaren are running gurneys on the top of their front wing at least in the wet:
Just checked the japan videos still on iPlayer, they're not there.ell66 wrote:They allways run gurneys on the fw....beelsebob wrote:McLaren are running gurneys on the top of their front wing at least in the wet:
I think it's just a choice the teams make.myurr wrote:Well I disagree with youn smikle wrote:I wholeheartedly disagree. No one understands the tyres the best. RedBull are just using the tyres on the limit that's all. They are clearly the fastest car, I don't buy that lacking race pace crap. There is no real evidence to show that. and that is for the redbull thread anyway.
The one area where the difference in tyre usage is best shown is in the damp conditions like today. McLaren are able to heat their tyres much more effectively than either Red Bull or Ferrari, and yet most of the time they are able to look after their tyres as well as the other two. A couple of times, particularly in extremely hot weather, they've had a deficit in this area but in general it is the Red Bull that is eating its tyres first, then McLaren, then Ferrari.
That McLaren are able to look after the tyres as well as the other two teams but without having to compromise in tyre warm up suggests that they have a better understanding of how to work the tyres and get the most from them.