raymondu999 wrote:Since the 2009 rules came in force that has been their issue hasn't it? The rear downforce I mean. For some reason they've never been able to crack it. The MP4-24 in preseason was actually decent if it used the MP4-23's rear wing (which they did a lot of the time). The MP4-25 then had the f-duct to allow it to crank up a whole load of rear wing; and finally the MP4-26 was a right mess in Silverstone.
Given what happened in Silverstone; the mind shudders as to what would happen next year with the new exhaust positioning
To be honest I think that Silverstone was a particularly bad case. Don't forget the car was set up expecting to still have some off throttle blowing only for a last minute change of mind by the FIA giving them 10 - 20 minutes to make setup changes to the car to disallow any off throttle blowing at all. The Mercedes engined cars were the only ones to have that last minute change foisted upon them, with all the others using the same configuration in FP3 as qualifying and the race.
I also take hope from the fact that most of their recent performance gains seem to have come from good old fashioned aero updates and refinement, rather than playing with engine maps and the EBD (as some other teams have done). For me there's no doubt that McLaren and Red Bull have greater gains from the EBD than the other teams, but even without those they would still have the strongest overall packages. Sure the balance between the two may switch, who knows, but I think there still would not be much to choose between them.
Also don't forget that without the packaging for the exhausts they may be able to tighten the rear end of that McLaren to get an even bigger advantage from the side pods.