Which it does at McLAren for quite some time now, I cant remember the -27, -26 and -25 being much more different.munudeges wrote:When you look at that front suspension and the lack of any apparent movement or damping, it's a joke.
Which it does at McLAren for quite some time now, I cant remember the -27, -26 and -25 being much more different.munudeges wrote:When you look at that front suspension and the lack of any apparent movement or damping, it's a joke.
But who said that the old car will be faster on those tyres? If the change of the sidewall stiffness from the tyres caused the lack of speed, what i doubt, then the switch to the old car wouldn't help at all, because this car was really designed around the old tyres.gary123 wrote:i did some researches about the times that did the mp4/27 and jenson did in qualifying 1.15.182. this year with the mp4/28 he did in free practice 1.15.422. this year tyres are about half second faster than last year, and the mp4/27 that was in montral was the firts version and the last one in brazil was about half second better or a bit more. so mclaren is running the 2013 championship with a slower and newer car...
edit: im speaking about montreal
One time never tells the whole story. Last year it was dry and Jenson's times improved over the weekend: 1.16.347 - FP1, 1.15.812 - FP2, 1.15.327 - FP3, 1.14.680 - Qualifying. Roughly, 0.5 seconds faster with every dry session: this is a combination of track evolution and improved setup.gary123 wrote:i did some researches about the times that did the mp4/27 and jenson did in qualifying 1.15.182. this year with the mp4/28 he did in free practice 1.15.422. this year tyres are about half second faster than last year, and the mp4/27 that was in montral was the firts version and the last one in brazil was about half second better or a bit more. so mclaren is running the 2013 championship with a slower and newer car...
edit: im speaking about montreal
As much as I loved it I'm not sure the snowplough would benefit this years car one bit; front end grip is definitely not one of their issues. According to many sources, including Martin Whitmarsh himself I believe, it's more the horrendous porpoising under braking and weak traction on corner exit and seeing as Canada is awash with both heavy braking and traction zones their weaknesses really stood out this weekend.trinidefender wrote:Hmmmm maybe it is time that Mclaren look at bringing back the famous snow plough. Or have they changed the rules to make it illegal?
Well supposedly one of the causes of the front end porpoising could be the front wing stalling allowing the nose to unload and rise then working forcing it back down then stalling and going back up and so on. Maybe the snow plough could help to stabilise front end downforce and help to reduce the porpoising.Jackles-UK wrote:As much as I loved it I'm not sure the snowplough would benefit this years car one bit; front end grip is definitely not one of their issues. According to many sources, including Martin Whitmarsh himself I believe, it's more the horrendous porpoising under braking and weak traction on corner exit and seeing as Canada is awash with both heavy braking and traction zones their weaknesses really stood out this weekend.trinidefender wrote:Hmmmm maybe it is time that Mclaren look at bringing back the famous snow plough. Or have they changed the rules to make it illegal?
The problem is that both their issues are complicated and it's not a simple "we just need 20 points of DF and then we'd be sorted" kind of deal. A solution will likely need amendments to both their suspension and aero package let alone a whole host of toe-in/out, camber, damper (if they ever decide to fit some!), anti roll-bar and maybe even engine map settings which is a hell of a long slog when they don't even have a decent base to work from right now - bit like trying to build a house of cards on a treadmill!
What should we comment about it? It is bulky if you compare it to the top contenders.trinidefender wrote: Anybody have any comment about the back end being bulky or maybe the tapering being to sharp and causing airflow separation?
MP4-28 front wing is about 1-2 years back than front wings of RB9 and F138. McLaren completly changed their front wing design from setup one big airfoil connected to central section + two smaller wings to design most temas follow from about two years with two airfoils connected to central section and one airfoil alone.hakan439 wrote:The font wing has been heavily criticized and believed to be the reason of stalling. But the new Ferrari front wing seems very similar to macca fw (in terms of philosophy).
Eh Have you even seen the Ferrari wing and what it wants to do and actually does? Same goes for RBR wing.hakan439 wrote:The font wing has been heavily criticized and believed to be the reason of stalling. But the new Ferrari front wing seems very similar to macca fw (in terms of philosophy).