That's not obvious at all to me; but then, I'm stupid.turbof1 wrote:The current problems at mclaren obviously aren't solved at all by targetting one area.
That's not obvious at all to me; but then, I'm stupid.turbof1 wrote:The current problems at mclaren obviously aren't solved at all by targetting one area.
Nope, I don't see that as obvious at all either. It's absolutely possible that one single thing is stopping the entire concept of the car from working.Pup wrote:That's not obvious at all to me; but then, I'm stupid.turbof1 wrote:The current problems at mclaren obviously aren't solved at all by targetting one area.
If the diffuser is stalling at the back, you have to take account that every bit directed to that has its influence, on the diffuser AND the other bits; I heavily tend to say somewhere the sum of all of it isn't matching the cfd and windtunnel numbers, judging on how long they are taking to get closer to what they want and also looking at the way they display the problem as something that will take several updates and more data. If it was even the tiniest aero bit that was solely the problem, no matter how difficult to find, they would have found it by now.beelsebob wrote:Nope, I don't see that as obvious at all either. It's absolutely possible that one single thing is stopping the entire concept of the car from working.Pup wrote:That's not obvious at all to me; but then, I'm stupid.turbof1 wrote:The current problems at mclaren obviously aren't solved at all by targetting one area.
And that's exactly why I believe that it was a relatively simple problem. They showed dramatically improved pace (probably 3rd overall) at Malaysia, and stated that they now understood the problem and would have it solved for China. Whether that is true or not we wait to see, but the evidence just now seems to point to them understanding and half fixing the problem in only 1 week. That to me says it was one single simple tweak defeating the entire concept, not that the concept was flawed and that everything needed changed to make anything work at all well.turbof1 wrote:If the diffuser is stalling at the back, you have to take account that every bit directed to that has its influence, on the diffuser AND the other bits; I heavily tend to say somewhere the sum of all of it isn't matching the cfd and windtunnel numbers, judging on how long they are taking to get closer to what they want and also looking at the way they display the problem as something that will take several updates and more data. If it was even the tiniest aero bit that was solely the problem, no matter how difficult to find, they would have found it by now.
I didn't want to say MP4-28 was total rubbish.Pup wrote:Well, actually he just named everything on the car that changed from last year, and said they were problem areas.
The situation is different then usual: from 2010 to 2012 they were at the front group with their car, but this year they are behind. A change of tactics and going agressive with larger updates might be a serious option.Coefficient wrote:I don't think Mclaren will go mad with updates at China, it's not their style. Small interative changes that can be properly ratified and converted into performance from race to race with a big update in the middle of the year is how I see it panning out. In China I believe we will see a new floor and diffusor being tested and maybe a few bits and pieces of other stuff but I can't see a 28B rolling out of the garage in Shanghai personally because I feel the car is sound, just needs a massage to find the speed.
According to...?turbof1 wrote:[...]
If they want to win the title this year, it is not enough to catch up with the fastest car; they'll need to have a car that can beat it.
Maybe not yet in China, but the race after that: highly probable.