When James Key was talking about not being able to use Wind Tunnel time, it was in during the impact of both Brexit and Covid, which was limiting how people and parts were moving around. Covid tests, isolation, documents for the transfer of the parts into the EU etc The COVID side has gone now and I suspect there is some beurocracy to do with Brexit, but I don't think they will have the same issue again, unless Covid rears its head this winter.Vasco wrote: ↑07 Sep 2022, 09:01Not sure if RBRs wind-tunnel is outdated - but in any case the main problem is around efficient use of the wind-tunnel. RBR want to build a new one in their Milton Keyes campus for better efficiency even though their existing wind-tunnel is in the UK. For Mclaren, this is even worse as they have to use a wind-tunnel in a different country. In one of the articles posted earlier - James Key alluded to not being able to fully utlise their wind-tunnel time.continuum16 wrote: ↑06 Sep 2022, 20:14What do you do with Key? It depends what the structure is; I feel like he might be a good Mike Elliot to someone's James Allison, but AFAIK McLaren does not have a CTO and TD (Key's current title) is top of the engineering dept. I single out Key because despite being in F1 for over a decade (TD since 2005) he has yet to produce a car that has finished higher than 4th in the WCC and even then it was the MCL35/35M which were evolutions of designs that were not his.
People are leaving Merc/RB for Aston, so clearly some people want to leave; it's probably a matter of Stroll willing to throw more cash at it than Brown.
As for the wind tunnel, yes, I know it's a limitation, but Alfa/Sauber have an excellent wind tunnel (and simulator) and they aren't exactly running away with the WCC despite being a customer team like McLaren and nearly operating at the budget cap. On the opposite end of the spectrum, RB uses the oldest and smallest wind tunnel in F1 (it's from the 1950s) with the least ATR time and seems to have no problem producing decent cars. Great tools help but you've got to know how to use them.
I still think that Ron Dennis was right that Mclaren at some point will need to have a partnership with an engine manufacturer and not as a customer. RBR has proven it with Honda. At this point, Mclaren's aero is so far behind it doesn't really matter that they are a customer.
I've said this till I've gone blue, the wind tunnel benefits are decided by how good are the people that are using it.
This years car suffered not only from the wind tunnel issues last year, but also from some poor design decisions which were also spoken about in that same article as the wind tunnel.
https://www.gpfans.com/en/f1-news/89626 ... id-brexit/
"Beyond that, I think, to be honest, we've chided ourselves a little bit for not being as brave as we could've been.
"Some of the bodywork concepts we had were quite extreme, and actually not dissimilar to what we've begun to see on a few other cars, let's say.
"We figured not knowing these cars very well and committing to something which was extreme in the first year of rags, 'can we be confident we're going to get this right particularly after some of that caught on the back, and so on early on? Have we got time to absolutely be sure?' We ended up a little bit more conservative."