Do you think the tyres behave the same way that they did several races ago though? The tyre temp profile looks different to me now. I'm not sure they are getting the same heat in at the start since Singapore. Agreed that in Vegas, or any colder race, it was a benefit at the start and in the race, but over a season it wasn't great of course as on the whole that would cause us to take a fair bit longer to complete a race due to more deg.SiLo wrote: ↑10 Nov 2023, 15:45For Vegas it's a positive, but they may still see more deg vs other teams on longer runs. I get the feeling the race will be 1 stop, so firing up the tyres after the pitstop quickly might net Mclaren quite a few seconds vs another team that can't.mwillems wrote: ↑10 Nov 2023, 14:55Yes but that was not a great thing once we were in the race as we were getting the tyres too warm and it took a fair bit of management to keep them in the right window.
This appears to have calmed down a bit now, not sure where exactly the balance is now but I haven't seen anything that suggests they unduly overheat in the race or that they don't warm up in a positive way at the start. Someone else might have some better observations, but it seems fine from what I can see lately.
Either that or we ARE getting the same heat in at the start and the extra downforce from the floor is making the race itself more manageable and reducing deg. I suppose we may have the best of both worlds?