Do you have any evidence to suggest it has a weaker front end… cause I don’t believe it does
Do you have any evidence to suggest it has a weaker front end… cause I don’t believe it does
RedBull reckon that’s worth a 1/10th at most.
When the car is not in a straight line, it is not only the front end that is not directly 'head on' to the flow. Turbulence from anywhere along the whole length could destroy the 'normal' flow, even just the tyres presenting a different angle could disrupt flow all along the car if it was bad enough.djos wrote: ↑25 Sep 2022, 02:00I’m basing it on commentary from multiple sources and what we know of Daniel’s driving style.
If the McLaren didn’t have a weak front end, then it stands to reason that the car wouldn't require the brake in a straight line then turn style Lando has been using.
To be fair to McLaren, it has been exacerbated this year by the weaker than expected Pirelli front tires. As a result Pirelli have announced they are working on a grippier front tire for next year.
The MCL does not have a weak frontend. What it does have is a characteristic where it lifts the front and understeers when you lift the break/accelerator pedal mid-corner. So you have to mix the accelerator and the breaks at the same time, you can't do one and then the other. Ricciardo is used to break and _then_ accelerate, which doesn't work with the McLaren.
You said it yourself. This is a weak front end from your description.billamend wrote: ↑25 Sep 2022, 22:06The MCL does not have a weak frontend. What it does have is a characteristic where it lifts the front and understeers when you lift the break/accelerator pedal mid-corner. So you have to mix the accelerator and the breaks at the same time, you can't do one and then the other. Ricciardo is used to break and _then_ accelerate, which doesn't work with the McLaren.
RIC was slow in Renault as well. He was only fast at RRB were everything worked in sync with his driving style.univex wrote: ↑26 Sep 2022, 06:40I tend to think this will be another Honda moment for McLaren.
With Honda they stuck doggedly to a design philosophy (minimal side pods) which Honda struggled with (focussed on cooling-reliability instead of performance). They openly ignored Honda requests for design changes.
With RBR, Christian Horner was upfront about giving Honda some design input and building the car around what they required.
Now you have McLaren sticking to a design philosophy (or at least not focussing on a design issue) in the belief that LAN can drive it and they will continue to get faster.
I would have been tempted to develop the car around RIC as he was previously fast in a very fast car.
NOR is faster in the current and previous MCL, however the car still needs to be faster. NOR has not driven a front running car, and you don't know what you don't know.
Yes, I know, this is a simplistic opinion on a much more complicated issue.
He was not slow in 2020. That's revisionismbauc wrote: ↑26 Sep 2022, 15:07RIC was slow in Renault as well. He was only fast at RRB were everything worked in sync with his driving style.univex wrote: ↑26 Sep 2022, 06:40I tend to think this will be another Honda moment for McLaren.
With Honda they stuck doggedly to a design philosophy (minimal side pods) which Honda struggled with (focussed on cooling-reliability instead of performance). They openly ignored Honda requests for design changes.
With RBR, Christian Horner was upfront about giving Honda some design input and building the car around what they required.
Now you have McLaren sticking to a design philosophy (or at least not focussing on a design issue) in the belief that LAN can drive it and they will continue to get faster.
I would have been tempted to develop the car around RIC as he was previously fast in a very fast car.
NOR is faster in the current and previous MCL, however the car still needs to be faster. NOR has not driven a front running car, and you don't know what you don't know.
Yes, I know, this is a simplistic opinion on a much more complicated issue.
Daniel definitely wasn't slow at Renault, that's why McLaren signed him, remember?bauc wrote: ↑26 Sep 2022, 15:07RIC was slow in Renault as well. He was only fast at RRB were everything worked in sync with his driving style.univex wrote: ↑26 Sep 2022, 06:40I tend to think this will be another Honda moment for McLaren.
With Honda they stuck doggedly to a design philosophy (minimal side pods) which Honda struggled with (focussed on cooling-reliability instead of performance). They openly ignored Honda requests for design changes.
With RBR, Christian Horner was upfront about giving Honda some design input and building the car around what they required.
Now you have McLaren sticking to a design philosophy (or at least not focussing on a design issue) in the belief that LAN can drive it and they will continue to get faster.
I would have been tempted to develop the car around RIC as he was previously fast in a very fast car.
NOR is faster in the current and previous MCL, however the car still needs to be faster. NOR has not driven a front running car, and you don't know what you don't know.
Yes, I know, this is a simplistic opinion on a much more complicated issue.