That is red bullstefan_ wrote:Great Britain 2013 - Saturday (29.06.2013)
https://imageshack.com/scaled/large/62/yz15.jpg
That is red bullstefan_ wrote:Great Britain 2013 - Saturday (29.06.2013)
https://imageshack.com/scaled/large/62/yz15.jpg
What I don't understand yet is that they seem to be quite deceived at some point by their windtunnel, just exactly the same way it happened to Ferrari last year. It is also interesting to see they have real warmup issues with the tyres, also very similar to what Ferrari experienced last year.Whitmarsh said the decision to switch to a pull-rod front suspension layout had been particularly costly for the team this year.
"It's primarily the front," he said. "The suspension systems front and rear are quite different. The front suspension connects and holds the wheels on the car, as you know, but it is also right in the wake and wake management of the front wing and that's had quite a big influence on what we are doing and that knocked on to a whole development path that I think at one stage was quite wrong."
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
im saying if the 27 returns there will be no development for her. just trying to get better results. but i think even that the 28 will be used like a laboratory car for next season, so the chances for the return of the 27 are very poor.Thunders wrote:No i don't see the 27 coming back, it's far too late to do that switch. Plus the cost to develop the 27.... no , never gonna happen.
They use the 28 as a test rig for 2014 and that's it.
The problem is the suspension, and the aero of this according to the quote.Ratatouille wrote:So those of you who said it was the front suspension, I guess you were right all the time:
http://en.espnf1.com/mclaren/motorsport ... 13601.html
From TFA:
What I don't understand yet is that they seem to be quite deceived at some point by their windtunnel, just exactly the same way it happened to Ferrari last year. It is also interesting to see they have real warmup issues with the tyres, also very similar to what Ferrari experienced last year.Whitmarsh said the decision to switch to a pull-rod front suspension layout had been particularly costly for the team this year.
"It's primarily the front," he said. "The suspension systems front and rear are quite different. The front suspension connects and holds the wheels on the car, as you know, but it is also right in the wake and wake management of the front wing and that's had quite a big influence on what we are doing and that knocked on to a whole development path that I think at one stage was quite wrong."
I guess that's why they still need to keep beating this deadhorse, they need to get it right before developing next year's car, unless they make a U-turn and go back to pushrod, which I think would be going backwards at this point.