I would have thought that the way it has been spoken about, the tyre magic would be somewhat independent of setup, though not totally.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 May 2025, 00:27Piastri said during the race that deg seemed higher than FP2. We don’t know what Mclaren changed in the setup but we do know that it was much warmer on Sunday than it was on Friday.mwillems wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 22:15I feel like the temp thing may well work in extremes, but time will tell. Let's see what happens in more extreme temps with cold and wet or with high heat.Emag wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 22:08
Even the temperature factor that was considered the main culprit behind the dominance in Miami, can't actually be considered a stable data point, because track temp was higher in Imola and that did nothing. Track temps in Miami were also the same as they were in Jeddah but RedBull was faster there. McLaren's advantage doesn't seem to be dictated by them at all. They probably have the most balanced package that works really well across different tracks and the gap increases or decreases depending on how much competitors can get out of their car in a given weekend.
Piastri at least seemed to be more sensitive on the hotter track, but it makes sense that he would be more susceptible if prior races are scrutinized.
Truth be told, nobody knows really what the real difference maker is, yet - it's total guesswork by everyone outside of the team. There is no consistent pattern really forming , other than that at the hottest race, it was fantastic, and at the wet race, the tyres warmed up well. But one hot race and one cold and wet race don't help us understand if this is where the benefit lies.
The car seems better at rear limited tracks, I think, but it still isn't consistent.
Interestingly, at Imola, S3 is rear limited and S1 more front limited,