McLaren MCL34

A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
User avatar
Jackles-UK
17
Joined: 06 Mar 2012, 06:02

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

I really don’t think the FW is the reason for inherent understeer. As many have said, it’s a huge surface aided by the nose/cape, chassis turning vanes etc. but for almost two decades the formula has been a rear limited one (front wings only got more complex to try and recover more rear aero) so I think it’s more likely a mechanical issue.

Ballast placement, suspension stiffness, anti-roll bar settings, compression rates, tyre pressures - all immensely important but not as sexy as a shiny new FW!

PhillipM
PhillipM
385
Joined: 16 May 2011, 15:18
Location: Over the road from Boothy...

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

That would be two decades before wider, stickier tyres, wider floors, much longer wheelbases, far more complex bargeboards for feeding the floor and diffuser, fixed weight distribution and the taller and wider rear wing, however...

I don't see it being too much of an issue once teams get on top of the tyres again, everyone was struggling with the new tyres a bit at one point or another.

User avatar
mwillems
28
Joined: 04 Sep 2016, 22:11

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

Jackles-UK wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 17:13
I really don’t think the FW is the reason for inherent understeer. As many have said, it’s a huge surface aided by the nose/cape, chassis turning vanes etc. but for almost two decades the formula has been a rear limited one (front wings only got more complex to try and recover more rear aero) so I think it’s more likely a mechanical issue.

Ballast placement, suspension stiffness, anti-roll bar settings, compression rates, tyre pressures - all immensely important but not as sexy as a shiny new FW!
I'm going to bring it back to the shiny new wing once more, just to ask a question from the tech heads. Sorry!
Also, they seem to understand the issue and know they need updated parts, so I think it is more likely to have ruled out those set up changes, possibly. Not definitely, but possibly.

Is it possible that because we have traded outwash over air under and around the car (Lower outboard on wing and larger inner sections versus say the Mercedes or RB solution), we are losing underfloor downforce and gaining drag reduction.... but in such a way that the trade of results is a net slower car? Maybe it is better to take the drag penalty because of a potential stronger benefit of the car being sucked more to the ground, front and back?
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

-Bandit

SmallSoldier
SmallSoldier
473
Joined: 10 Mar 2019, 03:54

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

mwillems wrote:
Jackles-UK wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 17:13
I really don’t think the FW is the reason for inherent understeer. As many have said, it’s a huge surface aided by the nose/cape, chassis turning vanes etc. but for almost two decades the formula has been a rear limited one (front wings only got more complex to try and recover more rear aero) so I think it’s more likely a mechanical issue.

Ballast placement, suspension stiffness, anti-roll bar settings, compression rates, tyre pressures - all immensely important but not as sexy as a shiny new FW!
I'm going to bring it back to the shiny new wing once more, just to ask a question from the tech heads. Sorry!
Also, they seem to understand the issue and know they need updated parts, so I think it is more likely to have ruled out those set up changes, possibly. Not definitely, but possibly.

Is it possible that because we have traded outwash over air under and around the car (Lower outboard on wing and larger inner sections versus say the Mercedes or RB solution), we are losing underfloor downforce and gaining drag reduction.... but in such a way that the trade of results is a net slower car? Maybe it is better to take the drag penalty because of a potential stronger benefit of the car being sucked more to the ground, front and back?
It’s way too early to really know the car potential... But for some reason, what Mclaren seem to be trying to do reminds me of Williams in 2014-2015... The Williams in those years bet for a car that was very quick in high speed circuits (very low drag), but wasn’t very quick in the short / low speed circuits... That Williams finished third in the Championship both years.

If what the team wants to do is show progress this season, focusing on the high speed tracks seem to be an smart idea... Not only are there more of those during the season (therefore more opportunities to make points), they are also tracks were passing is easier than in the slow ones (Melbourne, Monaco, Singapore for example) that are beneficial if you have a good grid position, but if you don’t nail qualifying your weekend is most probably ruined... So the fast tracks represent way more opportunities to finish in the points and show progress year on year, which for the shareholders and sponsors is a must this year.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

User avatar
mwillems
28
Joined: 04 Sep 2016, 22:11

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

SmallSoldier wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 18:22
mwillems wrote:
Jackles-UK wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 17:13
I really don’t think the FW is the reason for inherent understeer. As many have said, it’s a huge surface aided by the nose/cape, chassis turning vanes etc. but for almost two decades the formula has been a rear limited one (front wings only got more complex to try and recover more rear aero) so I think it’s more likely a mechanical issue.

Ballast placement, suspension stiffness, anti-roll bar settings, compression rates, tyre pressures - all immensely important but not as sexy as a shiny new FW!
I'm going to bring it back to the shiny new wing once more, just to ask a question from the tech heads. Sorry!
Also, they seem to understand the issue and know they need updated parts, so I think it is more likely to have ruled out those set up changes, possibly. Not definitely, but possibly.

Is it possible that because we have traded outwash over air under and around the car (Lower outboard on wing and larger inner sections versus say the Mercedes or RB solution), we are losing underfloor downforce and gaining drag reduction.... but in such a way that the trade of results is a net slower car? Maybe it is better to take the drag penalty because of a potential stronger benefit of the car being sucked more to the ground, front and back?
It’s way too early to really know the car potential... But for some reason, what Mclaren seem to be trying to do reminds me of Williams in 2014-2015... The Williams in those years bet for a car that was very quick in high speed circuits (very low drag), but wasn’t very quick in the short / low speed circuits... That Williams finished third in the Championship both years.

If what the team wants to do is show progress this season, focusing on the high speed tracks seem to be an smart idea... Not only are there more of those during the season (therefore more opportunities to make points), they are also tracks were passing is easier than in the slow ones (Melbourne, Monaco, Singapore for example) that are beneficial if you have a good grid position, but if you don’t nail qualifying your weekend is most probably ruined... So the fast tracks represent way more opportunities to finish in the points and show progress year on year, which for the shareholders and sponsors is a must this year.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
But I think it is worth discussing the potential risk/reward of the front wing philosophy in here.

I'm just curious about whether folks think there is much in that tradeoff.
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

-Bandit

User avatar
diffuser
222
Joined: 07 Sep 2012, 13:55
Location: Montreal

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

Got this from the f1 technical on 2019 2 aero write up. You can clearly see what the difference in tire wake with 2018 FW aero vs 2019 1 (plane horizontal strakes) vs 2019 2 (outward angled horizontal strakes).

https://u.cubeupload.com/turbof1/GIF4.gif


Image
Last edited by diffuser on 28 Mar 2019, 15:20, edited 1 time in total.

zoroastar
zoroastar
7
Joined: 31 Aug 2017, 08:04

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

SmallSoldier wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 18:22
mwillems wrote:
Jackles-UK wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 17:13
I really don’t think the FW is the reason for inherent understeer. As many have said, it’s a huge surface aided by the nose/cape, chassis turning vanes etc. but for almost two decades the formula has been a rear limited one (front wings only got more complex to try and recover more rear aero) so I think it’s more likely a mechanical issue.

Ballast placement, suspension stiffness, anti-roll bar settings, compression rates, tyre pressures - all immensely important but not as sexy as a shiny new FW!
I'm going to bring it back to the shiny new wing once more, just to ask a question from the tech heads. Sorry!
Also, they seem to understand the issue and know they need updated parts, so I think it is more likely to have ruled out those set up changes, possibly. Not definitely, but possibly.

Is it possible that because we have traded outwash over air under and around the car (Lower outboard on wing and larger inner sections versus say the Mercedes or RB solution), we are losing underfloor downforce and gaining drag reduction.... but in such a way that the trade of results is a net slower car? Maybe it is better to take the drag penalty because of a potential stronger benefit of the car being sucked more to the ground, front and back?
It’s way too early to really know the car potential... But for some reason, what Mclaren seem to be trying to do reminds me of Williams in 2014-2015... The Williams in those years bet for a car that was very quick in high speed circuits (very low drag), but wasn’t very quick in the short / low speed circuits... That Williams finished third in the Championship both years.

If what the team wants to do is show progress this season, focusing on the high speed tracks seem to be an smart idea... Not only are there more of those during the season (therefore more opportunities to make points), they are also tracks were passing is easier than in the slow ones (Melbourne, Monaco, Singapore for example) that are beneficial if you have a good grid position, but if you don’t nail qualifying your weekend is most probably ruined... So the fast tracks represent way more opportunities to finish in the points and show progress year on year, which for the shareholders and sponsors is a must this year.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
in 2014-2015 the williams had a huge advantage in that it had the mercedes pu, which at the time, was way more dominant than it is these days. im not sure that any team can depend on straight line speed alone to guarantee results. im sure that one of mclarens objectives was to not be at the bottom of the speed traps every race but hopefully they have something in the pipeline to make them faster in the corners. at least they wont be sitting ducks on the straights anymore though. i just dont see them blasting past the haas's or the alfas on straights. of course, like you said, good qualifying is key.

M840TR
M840TR
313
Joined: 13 Apr 2018, 21:04

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

mwillems wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 17:51
Jackles-UK wrote:
27 Mar 2019, 17:13
I really don’t think the FW is the reason for inherent understeer. As many have said, it’s a huge surface aided by the nose/cape, chassis turning vanes etc. but for almost two decades the formula has been a rear limited one (front wings only got more complex to try and recover more rear aero) so I think it’s more likely a mechanical issue.

Ballast placement, suspension stiffness, anti-roll bar settings, compression rates, tyre pressures - all immensely important but not as sexy as a shiny new FW!
I'm going to bring it back to the shiny new wing once more, just to ask a question from the tech heads. Sorry!
Also, they seem to understand the issue and know they need updated parts, so I think it is more likely to have ruled out those set up changes, possibly. Not definitely, but possibly.

Is it possible that because we have traded outwash over air under and around the car (Lower outboard on wing and larger inner sections versus say the Mercedes or RB solution), we are losing underfloor downforce and gaining drag reduction.... but in such a way that the trade of results is a net slower car? Maybe it is better to take the drag penalty because of a potential stronger benefit of the car being sucked more to the ground, front and back?
The whole point of the tapered FW is to not let turbulent air disrupt floor/diffuser performance. That's why they focused on the outwash instead of upwash. The FW doesn't generate significant drag anyway - specially without the cascades now - even if wider. The understeer problem has to do with several things like absence of S-duct and tapered FW.

M840TR
M840TR
313
Joined: 13 Apr 2018, 21:04

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

diffuser wrote:
28 Mar 2019, 02:53
Got this from the f1 technical on 2019 2 aero write up. You can clearly see what the difference in tire wake with 2018 FW aero vs 2019 1 (plane horizontal strakes) vs 2019 2 (outward angled horizontal strakes).

https://u.cubeupload.com/turbof1/GIF4.gif
I reckon Mcl34 is somewhere in the middle since it produces more outwash than the original model.

f1rules
f1rules
581
Joined: 11 Jan 2004, 15:34
Location: Denmark

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

unconventional but nice angle to show some details
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D2r1cj9XcAIWmNa.jpg
Image

f1rules
f1rules
581
Joined: 11 Jan 2004, 15:34
Location: Denmark

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

is that a gurney flap we are witnessing for the first time this year?
fabrega
Image

M840TR
M840TR
313
Joined: 13 Apr 2018, 21:04

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

f1rules wrote:
28 Mar 2019, 11:36
is that a gurney flap we are witnessing for the first time this year?
fabrega
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D2vDlvwXQAI8b0p.jpg
Either that's a reflection or the absolute tiniest gurney flap I have ever seen.

Benii6
Benii6
3
Joined: 03 Feb 2018, 16:32

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

Is it the same rear wing than in Australia?

Image
@AlbertFabrega

User avatar
_cerber1
239
Joined: 18 Jan 2019, 21:50
Location: From Russia with love

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

f1rules wrote:
28 Mar 2019, 11:36
is that a gurney flap we are witnessing for the first time this year?
fabrega
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D2vDlvwXQAI8b0p.jpg
And what's new?

M840TR
M840TR
313
Joined: 13 Apr 2018, 21:04

Re: McLaren MCL34

Post

_cerber1 wrote:
28 Mar 2019, 12:28
f1rules wrote:
28 Mar 2019, 11:36
is that a gurney flap we are witnessing for the first time this year?
fabrega
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D2vDlvwXQAI8b0p.jpg
And what's new?
Nothing much in this photo.