
Indeed, it is much lower than the rest of the field. Wait no it isnt, the only difference is a max 2cm difference in tub height and smooth shape, nose tip is definetely around the max height.n smikle wrote:Why Mclaren doesn't have the Helholtz chamber and their two biggest rivals do?
No high nose.
Only 3-4 teams have these, and 2 of those only since the last raceNo slotted side pod vanes.
Didn't RB only bring it to this race after Ferrari had it for a year lol? Pretty sure Ferrari are the only team with slotted sidepod vanes so no other team found them that useful either. Not to say McLaren have been great with developments this season but it's hardly ridiculous for them to not copy those novelty items.n smikle wrote:Why Mclaren doesn't have the Helholtz chamber and their two biggest rivals do?
They have no curvacious diffuser.
No William brake ducts
No high nose.
No slotted side pod vanes.
Freaking ridiculous.
vinuneuro wrote:Since it's what's most 'visible' I get that aero is what gets most talked about in this forum. But it's clear that McLaren's issues revolve around the tyres. It wouldn't be surprising that the team has become too aero-centric over the years, and why they've found themselves in this mess.
I enjoyed that a hell of a lot more than I probably should have. Thanks.Pup wrote:Update for Germany: hydroplated coach pins with sub-retinal handling compensating...
[McLaren Animation video]
I can't see the trick floor being the root cause of performance. Lotus is always there or there about with, outwardly, a far less trick car.Coefficient wrote:vinuneuro wrote:Since it's what's most 'visible' I get that aero is what gets most talked about in this forum. But it's clear that McLaren's issues revolve around the tyres. It wouldn't be surprising that the team has become too aero-centric over the years, and why they've found themselves in this mess.
I think what has happened is Mclaren are battling to develop a compromised car. The MP4 27 was supposed to race with the angled floor. This concept not only enabled the car to generate more rear downforce therefore making better use of the tyres; but also has an influence on the geometry of suspension components and other ancillaries. With the trick floor now banned the team is in the curious position of having to stand still whilst they re-optimise for the flat floor whilst other teams bolt pure pace onto their cars. In order to recreate the same rear performance that the trick floor achieved would probably require a redesign of everything aft of the driver so in this respect they might as well do a stepped nose too as this would also prompt a redesign downstream so they now have double the reason to spend the money.
Shakeman wrote:I can't see the trick floor being the root cause of performance. Lotus is always there or there about with, outwardly, a far less trick car.Coefficient wrote:vinuneuro wrote:Since it's what's most 'visible' I get that aero is what gets most talked about in this forum. But it's clear that McLaren's issues revolve around the tyres. It wouldn't be surprising that the team has become too aero-centric over the years, and why they've found themselves in this mess.
I think what has happened is Mclaren are battling to develop a compromised car. The MP4 27 was supposed to race with the angled floor. This concept not only enabled the car to generate more rear downforce therefore making better use of the tyres; but also has an influence on the geometry of suspension components and other ancillaries. With the trick floor now banned the team is in the curious position of having to stand still whilst they re-optimise for the flat floor whilst other teams bolt pure pace onto their cars. In order to recreate the same rear performance that the trick floor achieved would probably require a redesign of everything aft of the driver so in this respect they might as well do a stepped nose too as this would also prompt a redesign downstream so they now have double the reason to spend the money.
I'm still not convinced McLaren are that far behind and any successes Ferrari and RB have recently had could easily be attributed to lucking into the right tyre window for the track. I don't see a clear pecking order other than Lotus being a reasonable car on most tracks.
There is a Paddy Lowe interview in Autosport which claims to lay bare the problems McLaren had at Silverstone but I don't subscribe so I can't see it. Hopefully someone here can relay the gist of that interview which may shed more light on the situation.
The Lotus is irreleveant because its fundamental design has remained unchanged and it is not as vanilla as you think. The Lotus is a bit of a wolf in sheeps clothing.Shakeman wrote:I can't see the trick floor being the root cause of performance. Lotus is always there or there about with, outwardly, a far less trick car.Coefficient wrote:vinuneuro wrote:Since it's what's most 'visible' I get that aero is what gets most talked about in this forum. But it's clear that McLaren's issues revolve around the tyres. It wouldn't be surprising that the team has become too aero-centric over the years, and why they've found themselves in this mess.
I think what has happened is Mclaren are battling to develop a compromised car. The MP4 27 was supposed to race with the angled floor. This concept not only enabled the car to generate more rear downforce therefore making better use of the tyres; but also has an influence on the geometry of suspension components and other ancillaries. With the trick floor now banned the team is in the curious position of having to stand still whilst they re-optimise for the flat floor whilst other teams bolt pure pace onto their cars. In order to recreate the same rear performance that the trick floor achieved would probably require a redesign of everything aft of the driver so in this respect they might as well do a stepped nose too as this would also prompt a redesign downstream so they now have double the reason to spend the money.
I'm still not convinced McLaren are that far behind and any successes Ferrari and RB have recently had could easily be attributed to lucking into the right tyre window for the track. I don't see a clear pecking order other than Lotus being a reasonable car on most tracks.
There is a Paddy Lowe interview in Autosport which claims to lay bare the problems McLaren had at Silverstone but I don't subscribe so I can't see it. Hopefully someone here can relay the gist of that interview which may shed more light on the situation.
Why would the FIA go and measure McLaren's floor during winter? There was nothing illegal in there floor as it was on the limit of the manufacturing tolerances allowed. What was a problem was when 4 or 5 races in the floor was still on that same limit every time which shows that it wasn't a manufacturing error but rather McLaren were deliberately reaching those limits for a performance gain.mzivtins wrote:This whole floor thing has made me angry from the outset.
If they confromed to the letter of the regulation, and then apparently fell foul of that, then why has the regulation not been amended to prove a shut case.
Im going to say something that i hate when others do it but... the FIA had all winter to talk about the issue to macca, why wait? Just as mentioned previously in the thread, they have winter tested a car with the tyres around a key point that was allowed then taken away, now look, --- performances with tyres etc it no coincidence in my book.
Well lets hope the new update for germany lasts longer than 1 race
Very good point actually, something i failed to see completely.Owen.C93 wrote:Why would the FIA go and measure McLaren's floor during winter? There was nothing illegal in there floor as it was on the limit of the manufacturing tolerances allowed. What was a problem was when 4 or 5 races in the floor was still on that same limit every time which shows that it wasn't a manufacturing error but rather McLaren were deliberately reaching those limits for a performance gain.
The question is why should that matter if McLaren were doing it for performance reasons? Presumably McLaren are now subjected to a more stringent tolerance on their floor?Owen.C93 wrote: What was a problem was when 4 or 5 races in the floor was still on that same limit every time which shows that it wasn't a manufacturing error but rather McLaren were deliberately reaching those limits for a performance gain.