Suspension test at Mugello
I've always suspected as much. There's a video out there of Fernando saying how the 2007 McLaren had lots of oversteer, and we could see how Hamilton slide those rears on many a occasion.GrizzleBoy wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 22:39I think i learned something that confused me for a bit regarding Lewis' car preferences as I'd long heard about his preference for a car with a looser rear and couldn't really understand why the Ferrari and maybe the Merc wouldnt work for him.
Then I heard the word "snappy" a lot today and maybe it made a bit more sense.
With indoor karts, it's easy to get the rears to slide in a very predictable way that you can produce quite reliably and control quite easily if you know what you're doing.
This allows you to brake very late, with the expectation that the rear will step out and you can anticipate and control it to rotate the kart round a corner.
However, if those Karts had a loose rear that was also "snappy" there would be no way to be confident to brake late because you couldn't trust how the rear would act while trail braking into the apex, you couldn't trust how it would rotate around the apex, and you couldn't trust it wouldnt step out once you put the power down on corner exit.
So a loose rear, is not the same as a snappy rear, and it seems that is the problem.
Edit: And maybe it's another problem when the rear isn't actually loose at all (which seems much more the case with these regs cars), and instead of going from from controllable slip to a snap, it goes straight from stable to snap like a light switch.
Mercedes 2026 engine+ McLaren chassis going to be quite, something unless McLaren completely F upHammerfist wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 22:51
Did anyone tell Lewis that next year are new regulations? He’s talking about McLaren like they will be the fastest car next year. Funny guy. lol
I'm unable to see the post for some reason. Did he say or hint at what the exact issue is? Also did he mean just today or in general?
I agree though it's also simply the teams didn't anticipate that level of rain during the race, else I'm sure guys like Ver/Lec would have taken a different approach to their setup.Vinlarr89 wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 22:49LEC and VER both like this type of dna in the car, both cars were all over the place in the wet conditions today even Verstappen couldn’t hold onto the bull.
The mclarens must be so perfectly balanced because their operating window is frightening compared to the rest
maybe person made it so you have to follow them to see it, but no he didnt go into specifics, he just said they just had a debrief after the race, in the debrief they talked about where the problems are and that both him and Charles pinpointed exactly what the problem isScuderiaLeo wrote: ↑07 Jul 2025, 00:28I'm unable to see the post for some reason. Did he say or hint at what the exact issue is? Also did he mean just today or in general?
It sounds like there's multiple issues with the car so it could be any number of things![]()
We're going slightly off topic but I've been wanting to discuss this for some time, so...rifrafs2kees wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 23:48I've always suspected as much. There's a video out there of Fernando saying how the 2007 McLaren had lots of oversteer, and we could see how Hamilton slide those rears on many a occasion.
However, I do also believe that he'd changed his style significantly to cope with the Pirelli cheese tires. The partnership with Charles could be just be the right impetus for reintroduction of oversteery balance into his toolbox.
I'm very interested in how this shapes up but the signs are looking positive.
Its a completely different set of aero rules. Where ge matters a lot less. And its doubtful that mclaren will integrate the new pu better than mercedes. Almost no chance at all that mclaren is faster tgan merc next year and we don’t even know for sure who will have the best pu.Macklaren wrote: ↑07 Jul 2025, 00:00Mercedes 2026 engine+ McLaren chassis going to be quite, something unless McLaren completely F upHammerfist wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 22:51
Did anyone tell Lewis that next year are new regulations? He’s talking about McLaren like they will be the fastest car next year. Funny guy. lol
Not with the technical team they currently employ they won'tMacklaren wrote: ↑07 Jul 2025, 00:00Mercedes 2026 engine+ McLaren chassis going to be quite, something unless McLaren completely F upHammerfist wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 22:51
Did anyone tell Lewis that next year are new regulations? He’s talking about McLaren like they will be the fastest car next year. Funny guy. lol
I have the feeling that what will matter most will be fuel and battery deployment. Best ICE and chassis/aero will maybe come important as refinements of the whole package.Hammerfist wrote: ↑07 Jul 2025, 03:39Its a completely different set of aero rules. Where ge matters a lot less. And its doubtful that mclaren will integrate the new pu better than mercedes. Almost no chance at all that mclaren is faster tgan merc next year and we don’t even know for sure who will have the best pu.Macklaren wrote: ↑07 Jul 2025, 00:00Mercedes 2026 engine+ McLaren chassis going to be quite, something unless McLaren completely F upHammerfist wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 22:51
Did anyone tell Lewis that next year are new regulations? He’s talking about McLaren like they will be the fastest car next year. Funny guy. lol