Farnborough wrote: ↑28 Nov 2024, 12:10
I don't feel the tires and how they work is understood here in your comments.
Emphatically, the tires structure were never going to overheat here at this ambient and pressure combination. Any mitigation from team or driver would be to place more load into the tire (whole assembly) through aero and or their actions, not less.
MB aero map had it in spades, and it showed by considerable margin, over everyone else. McL moved themselves behind the three teams that had cars finish in front of them. That's the observable reality.
McL couldn't pull theirs into range with the aero load map they chose to run. That was also compromised by their mid season choice to develop the flex rear wing. That has an affect, and we could see it here.
The driver can, by pushing brake bias forward, load more extremely the front tires to bring heat into them, as needed here.
Making it clear, THERE'S NO SUGGESTION IN MY WRITING THAT SAYS THEY CAN CHANGE AERO MAP FROM STEERING WHEEL loading front tires is completely normal under extreme braking, more so with bias moved in that direction.
If you don't hold a full picture of the tire characteristics, then most debate will lead to nowhere. In which case there's no logical and productive discourse to be had in this topic.
Farnborough wrote: ↑27 Nov 2024, 14:25
"The gaps here had nothing to do with the wing, IMO, and everything about mechanical traction, partially down to how we could get the car to interact with the tyres."
Interaction with the tires is pure load, from the wings and floor. Take any away from that total and it'll get harder, choices less, driver confidence diminished, etc. Graining increased and so forth. It's there in plain sight.
Stella even confirmed this in his words of "Extreme set up shift from drivers steering wheel controls" or words to that effect. Those to counter load missing from the setup they chose to Q and race with.
1) In this conversation about whether the flexi wing has hindered the Mclaren at Vegas, no new wing, no reinforced wing, has run at Vegas, both wings here are old spec wings that were at Monza
2) You yourself have stated that all the load into the tyres comes from aero and I have quoted this again above.
I know that changing the settings can get more heat into the tyres. Mechanical changes can affect how much load goes into the different tyres under braking. I may not be technically minded, but this is what I am explaining. but it is not the point, I was just trying to debunk the idea that the issues were aero related and whilst your replies have slowly creeped away from this, this was the only point I was debunking.
There was no new wing run here, flexi wings had nothing to do with it and the car ran as fast as the fastest cars in front once mechanical changes had occurred. Pointing the fingers at flexi wings or aero is simply way wide of the mark.
As to whether there was an increase in aero load due to the changes or the car was just handling differently, ultimately we won't know. it's more likely to be the latter, at least in the majority. The Mclaren was fast at Vegas, they just didn't know how to get the speed until it was too late.
Edit: Hang on, I never said overheating you've just put that word into my mouth, I said kinder to the front tyres. This may mean they are doing less work at certain areas of the braking phase and more work at others, or getting the front more inclined to turn in without fuss ,as well as how the driver is handling the car, so that the tyres are less likely to grain from the corner entries and braking zones.