And were's your evidence to back up your latest theory? If the McLaren wing can pick up rubber so easily, then so will every other wing of every other car. Or does the McLaren have some secret rubber magnet under the back of the wing?n smikle wrote:I take mclaren's word seriously though. The airfoil can be easily spoiled by foreign matter under the wing. You don't need a huge 1 inch chunk of rubber to do it. Simple small lumps of rubber just behind the leading edge can disrupt the air flow significantly, direct loss of down-force and increase in drag.feynman wrote:I guess it's just a pity Pirelli don't supply front wings to teams.
The McLaren pitwall were happy to let us spend half a week labouring under the illusion that Hamilton had punctured a rear in Japan, before the tyre company interjected with facts to put us straight.
Now we have that same pitwall insisting phantom chunks of rubber and unspecified damage to both front wings, on both cars, at the same time, and to the same detrimental effect on laptime ... apparently.
They took a best guess on dry setup, and landed a mile-off, good for a lap, voracious on fronts soon after.
The camera's will never be able to catch such things like rubber lumps under the front wing of all places, unless the camera guy has the wing put down on a work table.. so all this doubt based on the pictures is unfounded.
From the tone of this paragraph... are you saying they were perhaps testing the front wing f-duct, and it kind of failed, and this is how it bit them back?richard_leeds wrote:... or there was something unusual about the McLaren front wing at this race. A thin slot perhaps. As Whitmarsh said about Mercedes, if you are not developing something like that now, then you are too late for the start of next season.
Well, given that some cars run a whole race without a part of an endplate without any significant loss of performance I'm sure if something on the front wing was making the car lose 10 points of DF, it would be clearly visible.n smikle wrote:Wait, leeds, neither you nor I would see anything on the front wing even if we in parc ferme. You get me? Hamilton can't see anything on that wing. Only the mechanics and the engineers who pull apart the car. You just need some hot rubber sticking to the underside which is not visible from eye level.
So, McLaren engineers are another source of "reliable" info for you?n smikle wrote:Mclaren engineers! and the fact that drivers struggled with understeer which got worse as the race continued.
If you can explain differently or link to some source how ten points of down-force was lost from the front axle I am all ears.
I also believe that it could be an experimental part on the front wing. Not so warmed to the setup being a problem though. They could even have an F-duct front wing on and the ducts got clogged.Mandrake wrote:Well, given that some cars run a whole race without a part of an endplate without any significant loss of performance I'm sure if something on the front wing was making the car lose 10 points of DF, it would be clearly visible.n smikle wrote:Wait, leeds, neither you nor I would see anything on the front wing even if we in parc ferme. You get me? Hamilton can't see anything on that wing. Only the mechanics and the engineers who pull apart the car. You just need some hot rubber sticking to the underside which is not visible from eye level.
I'm still with Richard that it's either been a setup issue or some experimental part on the FW (although we have no evidence that something was different on the front wing)
I don't see how that would lose you 10points of DF though.n smikle wrote:I also believe that it could be an experimental part on the front wing. Not so warmed to the setup being a problem though. They could even have an F-duct front wing on and the ducts got clogged.Mandrake wrote:Well, given that some cars run a whole race without a part of an endplate without any significant loss of performance I'm sure if something on the front wing was making the car lose 10 points of DF, it would be clearly visible.n smikle wrote:Wait, leeds, neither you nor I would see anything on the front wing even if we in parc ferme. You get me? Hamilton can't see anything on that wing. Only the mechanics and the engineers who pull apart the car. You just need some hot rubber sticking to the underside which is not visible from eye level.
I'm still with Richard that it's either been a setup issue or some experimental part on the FW (although we have no evidence that something was different on the front wing)