As a sub plot to this year I'm looking forward to watching Piastri develop and to see how he can deal with Lando.
I'm excited to see if he has a couple of stellar performances up his sleeve this year.
Im expecting him to be very quick in qualifying and not mistake-prone but suffer a bit in the first laps and perhaps lack aggression/assertiveness that can be handy in the midfield.
Please stop lecturing the ignorant, it’s clear they’d rather indulge in their tabloid fantasies than reality.PhillipM wrote: ↑25 Feb 2023, 17:06They are the *best* example. They didn't get there by adding extra weight to every part 'just in case' so they never have any issues. They pare everything down to the last 0.1% as they showed last year.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑25 Feb 2023, 17:01Red Bull is a bad example as they are the fastest team so they have the privilege to get a few things wrong.
Your performance delta from a winning car to the back of the grid is only 2-3%, you don't leave anything on the table just to keep fans happy at home about you doing twice the milage in testing but at the back of the grid.
You have a problem in testing when you have serious problems you can't fix and can't nail down the source of - we've seen before over the years teams only getting 30 laps in for days in a row. That's not the case here. It's a bit of cracked carbon. It's an easy fix. The time is what it is, you can't really change how fast the repair takes when it comes to resin, no matter whether you're Red Bull or Mclaren or Williams.
Every midfield team has aspirations of "being clear of the midfield"PhillipM wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 02:05No it's more just things they've seen already on cars they were hoping were behind them that are basically easy bits of laptime without much downside, that's why they're kicking themselves a bit. It's not magic massive differences, it'll maybe just put them clear to the front of the midfield where they wanted to be again.
As always thanks for your insight. Any idea where the team thinks they are in the pecking order? From your comment above i'm inferring that they believe they are in the upper half of the midfield and if they had gotten these things that will come in Baku then they will be clear of the midfield?PhillipM wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 02:05No it's more just things they've seen already on cars they were hoping were behind them that are basically easy bits of laptime without much downside, that's why they're kicking themselves a bit. It's not magic massive differences, it'll maybe just put them clear to the front of the midfield where they wanted to be again.
Yours is the "orthodox" view and it makes sense but who would have thought that by flooding the diffuser with exhaust, and thus technically "defeating" the low pressure zone, that you would increase downforce? It turns out that by making the flow faster under the diffuser, it increased the suction. I'm arguing the same thing. By having the air flow faster horizontally over the diffuser that it will actually "pull" air out of the diffuser and increasing its effectiveness and suction. Plus you will not be feeding air into the negative pressure zone beneath the rear wing and increasing its effectiveness... all the while decreasing drag on the straights. I am asserting that it is counter-intuitive just as the blown diffuser was.mwillems wrote: ↑25 Feb 2023, 18:15That wing creates more of low pressure / high pressure differential at the diffuser exit, sucking more air from the diffuser. The whole principle is to get as much air as possible round to the area above the diffuser to have a higher pressure forcing the lower pressure underneath it (Diffuser exit) to try to equalize, which by doing so will mean it will try to take some air pressure from under the car, which creates suction and downforce.
What's his face said the goal is still top 4, for the year, but he doesn't think they're top 5 ATM.swifteddie1 wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 05:45As always thanks for your insight. Any idea where the team thinks they are in the pecking order? From your comment above i'm inferring that they believe they are in the upper half of the midfield and if they had gotten these things that will come in Baku then they will be clear of the midfield?PhillipM wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 02:05No it's more just things they've seen already on cars they were hoping were behind them that are basically easy bits of laptime without much downside, that's why they're kicking themselves a bit. It's not magic massive differences, it'll maybe just put them clear to the front of the midfield where they wanted to be again.
Is there any truth to what has been reported that they stopped development on the MCL60 a couple of months ago and that the Baku update is essentially a change in aerodynamic philosophy and a B version of the MCL60?
I don’t think there is a B Version of the MCL60, found the quote from Stella:swifteddie1 wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 05:45As always thanks for your insight. Any idea where the team thinks they are in the pecking order? From your comment above i'm inferring that they believe they are in the upper half of the midfield and if they had gotten these things that will come in Baku then they will be clear of the midfield?PhillipM wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 02:05No it's more just things they've seen already on cars they were hoping were behind them that are basically easy bits of laptime without much downside, that's why they're kicking themselves a bit. It's not magic massive differences, it'll maybe just put them clear to the front of the midfield where they wanted to be again.
Is there any truth to what has been reported that they stopped development on the MCL60 a couple of months ago and that the Baku update is essentially a change in aerodynamic philosophy and a B version of the MCL60?
Due to its properties and behaviour the Hot air created a low pressure zone in the same principal but many times more efficient.gcdugas wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 06:54Yours is the "orthodox" view and it makes sense but who would have thought that by flooding the diffuser with exhaust, and thus technically "defeating" the low pressure zone, that you would increase downforce? It turns out that by making the flow faster under the diffuser, it increased the suction. I'm arguing the same thing. By having the air flow faster horizontally over the diffuser that it will actually "pull" air out of the diffuser and increasing its effectiveness and suction. Plus you will not be feeding air into the negative pressure zone beneath the rear wing and increasing its effectiveness... all the while decreasing drag on the straights. I am asserting that it is counter-intuitive just as the blown diffuser was.mwillems wrote: ↑25 Feb 2023, 18:15That wing creates more of low pressure / high pressure differential at the diffuser exit, sucking more air from the diffuser. The whole principle is to get as much air as possible round to the area above the diffuser to have a higher pressure forcing the lower pressure underneath it (Diffuser exit) to try to equalize, which by doing so will mean it will try to take some air pressure from under the car, which creates suction and downforce.
More flap angle makes the air flow faster, not less flap angle. That's how a wing works after all, the air travels further on the suction side because of the camber and therefore goes faster on the suction side!
Sorry just trying to understand this.PhillipM wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 02:05No it's more just things they've seen already on cars they were hoping were behind them that are basically easy bits of laptime without much downside, that's why they're kicking themselves a bit. It's not magic massive differences, it'll maybe just put them clear to the front of the midfield where they wanted to be again.