gilgen wrote:McLaren have made a big change by going to pullrod front suspension. Ferrari suffered initial problems in understanding their system when introduced last year, so there is no reason to suspect that after a race or two, the car will not be back on pace.
I don't think Ferrari struggled with their front suspension last year, because Alonso won the second race of the season in wet conditions, an unlikely outcome for a team struggling to come to grips with grip, yanno? The setup may very well have not been optimized at that point, but it certainly wasn't holding the team back.
All of that really means it's probably not a good idea to point the blame toward something specific.
I think the MP4-28 suffers from merely being an all-new car. In one way or another, every innovation McLaren has brought to bear was either banned (F-duct), rendered useless (U-pods), or easily copied by other teams (the current exhaust). This is why Whitmarsh stated the need for a clean-sheet design philosophy: the old one was done, and previous gimmicks could have easily masked more fundamental performance issues.
To me, the MP4-28 looks like the result of a back-to-basics approach. It may have a lot of potential, but it also might take a while to unlock it (see: F2012).