Well yeah they would have to gear it up a little bit longer, but the presence of the F-duct shall mean they have less drag on higher speeds and can climb quicker to top speed as well. I think in reality on a long enough straight the McLaren might actually climb to the same speeds at roughly the same time as other cars, and then proceed to accelerate further.raymondu999 wrote:What I meant was, let's say RBR get speedtraps of... say... 285. Then McLarens (with F-duct, don't forget. And Ferrari isn't racing theirs here) get maybe... 292 (totally random figure) then they would have to gear the gearbox less aggressive... have longer gears. This way they would reach 285 *after* the Red Bulls do. Of course, this is assuming a perfectly ideal world where the McLarens and Red Bulls have equal traction, aero efficiency, fuel weights, engine torque figures etc
Then again I think that difference is negligible at Monte Carlo.
I have tipped McLaren, but remembering the fact that Renault has a much shorter car they might have a good chance to jump a few places here!