GoranF1 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2018, 21:41
About the car, people say its better to have the problems now and not Australia, are they trying to say Mclaren are better placed than the teams who have had no problems ?
Mercedes have had pretty much no problem, so they know they can run an average of 100 laps a day without fault. maybe they will run in to problems when they do another 300 laps over the next 2 days.Then they will know about problems caused by 1000ish laps. Mclaren have had loads of problems running 355 laps. They wont get to know of any problems when running 5, 6, 700 laps. So its not in any way good to have problems now! It is definitely NOT better to have no problems now. Its better to have no problems and run a long hard test program.
Mercedes is running the same engine that they designed for their car, McLaren are running a Renault engine for the first time.
This doom and gloom is getting boring and old. Red Bull showed up in 2015, nev er having mated the engine to the car. They could not get it started. It stayed in the garage for most of both tests, where they drilled holes in it to keep it running. Then when the season started, their fuel additive ate the orings in the fuel flow sensors, causing failures.
They won three races.
> So its not in any way good to have problems now!
YES IT IS. If you think you have the car sorted, the it goes boom with new issues in Australia, now you are behind IN THE SEASON and not just in testing. You don't lose points in testing do you now? Instead of developing the car, they are still figuring it out. That is 100000% what testing is for. To find issues and get mileage.
This is the same McLaren that showed up with Octopus exhaust in testing, then showed up with titanium diffuser and more similar exhaust to the others and won races that season as well.
Saying finding this out when the season started is not only illogical, it's ridiculously illogical.