I saw this quote from Alonso:
Q:You mentioned the problems with traction. Is the source of these problems rather on the aerodynamic
side, on the mechanical side or maybe even in one of the systems, you know, in directive suspensions,
whatever?
FA:I think it’s all aerodynamics to be honest because every time we test a small part in the
aerodynamics side, a rear brake duct or whatever, lip here or there, the car change completely so I
guess we don't have optimised traction in terms of aerodynamic philosophy.
Have we reached a point where teams are creating cars that have incredible aero in lab conditions but because they're so reliant on every vortex working perfectly, every little flick guiding the air in just the right place to have a positive effect on the car suffers in the real world.
I'm thinking particularly of Mclaren here and to a lesser extent Ferrari whose in lab developments haven't really delivered on track this year. It seems that while we may not have the aero parts, the chimneys etc, all over the car like pre-2009, the airflow is being managed in such a complex way that the slightest change in ride-height or small aero development completely throws the car out of balance. We hear so often that every tiny winglet guides the air in such a way over the car to interact with the rest of the airflow to create downforce but because all these complex flows are reliant upon one another, if one tiny piece of the puzzle is out of place then the car doesn't work at all. I may be barking up the wrong tree, but could the reliance on advanced CFD and simulation be creating a problem for teams? they're developing cars in a virtual world where they can tune the cars to such a fine level to get peak performance that they sometimes make a rod for their own back. I'm in no way suggesting that CFD or any simulation data is a bad thing, just that as teams try to micro manage the airflow it must mean that they're reliant on everything working in concert to achieve the downforce they're after. If one tiny piece doesn't quite work how they want then the whole aero philosphy fails. Basically, there's more ways for it to go wrong.
I'm sure that someone who has a better engineering brain might be able to describe it better than I can but thought I'd throw it out there for discussion.