2025 McLaren F1 Team

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Mattchu
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Joined: 07 Jul 2014, 19:37

Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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Image

Macklaren
Macklaren
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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Let's GO!

Avocado
Avocado
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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Beautiful. Horner, where are you? :lol:

Macklaren
Macklaren
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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Soooo...does McL have any updates here or not? If they are holding back a big package until Spain, is that a concern that the TD will affect McLaren more than other teams, as some have speculated?

CjC
CjC
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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Macklaren wrote:
15 May 2025, 18:22
Soooo...does McL have any updates here or not? If they are holding back a big package until Spain, is that a concern that the TD will affect McLaren more than other teams, as some have speculated?
No mention of updates from the drivers today just a ‘very quick car’
Just a fan's point of view

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mwillems
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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They mentioned updates in the next few races, so they could hit any time. But they hadn't been specific and they have generally been cagier when talking about it all. I think its all a lot more fluid these days.
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

-Bandit

FittingMechanics
FittingMechanics
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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I believe any team that is "dominant" will postpone or withheld the upgrades. McLaren seems to be the fastest, they are running away with the WCC and doing quite well in WDC. Why push an update, maybe become even faster and then get a reactive FIA clampdown because you are too dominant.

I wouldn't worry about the team updates. They proved they know what they are doing, slow and methodical is the way to go.

AR3-GP
AR3-GP
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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FittingMechanics wrote:
15 May 2025, 22:28
I believe any team that is "dominant" will postpone or withheld the upgrades. McLaren seems to be the fastest, they are running away with the WCC and doing quite well in WDC. Why push an update, maybe become even faster and then get a reactive FIA clampdown because you are too dominant.

I wouldn't worry about the team updates. They proved they know what they are doing, slow and methodical is the way to go.
It's possible that they are feeling the effects of the reduction of windtunnel and CFD hours as the 1st ranking team. There is a need to split resources between this year and next year. So it's unreasonable to expect the same amount of output as teams which have more time (this is effectively what you are all are measuring them against)
It doesn't turn.

Rikhart
Rikhart
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Joined: 10 Feb 2009, 20:21

Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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FittingMechanics wrote:
15 May 2025, 22:28
I believe any team that is "dominant" will postpone or withheld the upgrades. McLaren seems to be the fastest, they are running away with the WCC and doing quite well in WDC. Why push an update, maybe become even faster and then get a reactive FIA clampdown because you are too dominant.

I wouldn't worry about the team updates. They proved they know what they are doing, slow and methodical is the way to go.
Aren't they too dominant already?

Macklaren
Macklaren
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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I'm only interested in updates because I want Lando to feel comfortable and get up to speed again. Car is fast enough

Watto
Watto
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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AR3-GP wrote:
15 May 2025, 22:42
FittingMechanics wrote:
15 May 2025, 22:28
I believe any team that is "dominant" will postpone or withheld the upgrades. McLaren seems to be the fastest, they are running away with the WCC and doing quite well in WDC. Why push an update, maybe become even faster and then get a reactive FIA clampdown because you are too dominant.

I wouldn't worry about the team updates. They proved they know what they are doing, slow and methodical is the way to go.
It's possible that they are feeling the effects of the reduction of windtunnel and CFD hours as the 1st ranking team. There is a need to split resources between this year and next year. So it's unreasonable to expect the same amount of output as teams which have more time (this is effectively what you are all are measuring them against)
I wonder too if they are being careful not to fall into the trap Red Bull did too this years car I think most have seen has some of the RB20 traits early last year best car but a bit more on edge. Add what you mention and be careful before you commit too much and find what Red Bull did probably too late - at least in so far its taking a lot of backtracking to try and get on the right path again.

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BMMR61
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Joined: 25 May 2021, 13:02
Location: Australia.

Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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FittingMechanics wrote:
15 May 2025, 22:28
I believe any team that is "dominant" will postpone or withheld the upgrades. McLaren seems to be the fastest, they are running away with the WCC and doing quite well in WDC. Why push an update, maybe become even faster and then get a reactive FIA clampdown because you are too dominant.

I wouldn't worry about the team updates. They proved they know what they are doing, slow and methodical is the way to go.
Absolutely. The 30+ second win in Miami created a storm of "what are they doing in there?" calls, sending thermal imaging to FIA, massive media speculation etc etc. At least the FIA tech guys haven't been able to work out what McLaren have done for their "domination".

McLaren have built strongly since their early 2023 mess, a legacy of a team structure which failed to acknowledge and integrate the aero work of PP. Andrea laid it on the line and said that they had a major upgrade coming before mid season and stuck to that with the Austria/Silverstone revelation. They only diverted from stated intent after that when the "three main upgrades" became two as they held back until Singapore. 2023 was a great step up with some deserved podiums and a sprint win.

2024 again started poorly with what Andrea said were issues about being behind schedule getting the MCL60 fully ready. This was shown to be more than excuse making when by round 3 they were solidly in the points. But again a major upgrade was promised well in advance and not introduced until Miami. It worked, the only proviso being it worked better than their simulations predicted - a minor though distinct issue? Later in the season Andrea went against popular team opinion that the end of regs was reaching the end of it's evolution when he said the performance trajectory at McLaren would continue for some time.

My main points are - Andrea doesn't BS like some are, and the engineering team have been engaged in a more systematic approach that draws strong correlation to wind tunnel data and simulations, resulting in "upgrades" that are mega, and updates that often produce workable results. Fans are always clamouring for "upgrades" but updates of questionable value are the usual result at many teams. One has to look at Aston Martin to see this. At Miami this year, two years of "upgrades" produced a 0.2 deficit to 2023 qualifying. Meanwhile McLaren were 2.1 seconds quicker!

Anyways. This is GP weekend and all the huff and puff of who brought what. I'm less interested in the C6 tyre than I am of the need to use C4 and C5 in the race. The only interesting thing about the C6 to me is if it will endure a qualifying lap without massive fall off in the final sector - something that McLaren may be able to once again ace.

venkyhere
venkyhere
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Joined: 10 Feb 2024, 06:17

Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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BMMR61 wrote:
16 May 2025, 03:31
FittingMechanics wrote:
15 May 2025, 22:28
I believe any team that is "dominant" will postpone or withheld the upgrades. McLaren seems to be the fastest, they are running away with the WCC and doing quite well in WDC. Why push an update, maybe become even faster and then get a reactive FIA clampdown because you are too dominant.

I wouldn't worry about the team updates. They proved they know what they are doing, slow and methodical is the way to go.
Absolutely. The 30+ second win in Miami created a storm of "what are they doing in there?" calls, sending thermal imaging to FIA, massive media speculation etc etc. At least the FIA tech guys haven't been able to work out what McLaren have done for their "domination".

McLaren have built strongly since their early 2023 mess, a legacy of a team structure which failed to acknowledge and integrate the aero work of PP. Andrea laid it on the line and said that they had a major upgrade coming before mid season and stuck to that with the Austria/Silverstone revelation. They only diverted from stated intent after that when the "three main upgrades" became two as they held back until Singapore. 2023 was a great step up with some deserved podiums and a sprint win.

2024 again started poorly with what Andrea said were issues about being behind schedule getting the MCL60 fully ready. This was shown to be more than excuse making when by round 3 they were solidly in the points. But again a major upgrade was promised well in advance and not introduced until Miami. It worked, the only proviso being it worked better than their simulations predicted - a minor though distinct issue? Later in the season Andrea went against popular team opinion that the end of regs was reaching the end of it's evolution when he said the performance trajectory at McLaren would continue for some time.

My main points are - Andrea doesn't BS like some are, and the engineering team have been engaged in a more systematic approach that draws strong correlation to wind tunnel data and simulations, resulting in "upgrades" that are mega, and updates that often produce workable results. Fans are always clamouring for "upgrades" but updates of questionable value are the usual result at many teams. One has to look at Aston Martin to see this. At Miami this year, two years of "upgrades" produced a 0.2 deficit to 2023 qualifying. Meanwhile McLaren were 2.1 seconds quicker!

Anyways. This is GP weekend and all the huff and puff of who brought what. I'm less interested in the C6 tyre than I am of the need to use C4 and C5 in the race. The only interesting thing about the C6 to me is if it will endure a qualifying lap without massive fall off in the final sector - something that McLaren may be able to once again ace.
May I add the state of the art windtunnel that McLaren invested into, and which came into operation, in 2023. They spent more than half a year calibrating it, and the reason the 2024 car (the real car which came in Miami and won Lando his first race) was so good was because this facility played a major role in terms of generating data for their simulators. McLaren's correlation between sim and real world, I guess, is the best on the grid.

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_cerber1
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Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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venkyhere wrote:
16 May 2025, 06:04
May I add the state of the art windtunnel that McLaren invested into, and which came into operation, in 2023. They spent more than half a year calibrating it, and the reason the 2024 car (the real car which came in Miami and won Lando his first race) was so good was because this facility played a major role in terms of generating data for their simulators. McLaren's correlation between sim and real world, I guess, is the best on the grid.
According to Zach Brown, the first car to be developed in the new wind tunnel was the MCL39.

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BMMR61
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Joined: 25 May 2021, 13:02
Location: Australia.

Re: 2025 McLaren F1 Team

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_cerber1 wrote:
16 May 2025, 06:52
venkyhere wrote:
16 May 2025, 06:04
May I add the state of the art windtunnel that McLaren invested into, and which came into operation, in 2023. They spent more than half a year calibrating it, and the reason the 2024 car (the real car which came in Miami and won Lando his first race) was so good was because this facility played a major role in terms of generating data for their simulators. McLaren's correlation between sim and real world, I guess, is the best on the grid.
According to Zach Brown, the first car to be developed in the new wind tunnel was the MCL39.
In the cost-cap age, what rolls out of wind tunnel development needs to work. McLaren have for two years seemed to have never taken a backward step. The technology which has resulted in the exceptional tyre temperature control is likely to be a range of individual elements developed there all working in unison. As it appears the technical team appear to be doing, proud and exciting times after years of pain for us fans.