Emag wrote: ↑18 Feb 2026, 20:03
f1isgood wrote: ↑18 Feb 2026, 19:50
AR3-GP wrote: ↑18 Feb 2026, 19:40
Right but Mclaren had the smallest windtunnel allocation. Mclaren is the only team who has the same car from the first Bahrain test right now and it will be like that in Melbourne.
While true, they are definitely showing a lot more detail on their car than Red Bull at least to my untrained eyes. Maybe I am wrong here.
While you are right about the wind tunnel you also have to account for where the teams start as well. McLarens Technical team had just produced two fantastic well rounded cars as opposed to Red Bull who were sorting out their correlation issues even late into last season. Red Bull were struggling to figure out what went wrong with the RB20 while McLaren have always gotten in reality what they've expected from the wind tunnel as they themselves say every time. That should make it much easier to optimize for, when you target a regulation change especially.
To me if McLaren aren't at the top it would be mostly down to having set lower targets really which is unlikely. They'll be there at the front, worst case fighting another team but normally winning.
McLaren's car is one of the more "vanilla" cars out there. They looked more refined because they literally said they were going to bring the race 1 package earlier than others, but in terms of clever details / interpretations there's almost nothing in the McLaren. At least nothing we can see.
If McLaren aren't at the top it's firstly because they get the least amount of wind tunnel hours and secondly because this new team they got don't really have a proven track record of being great innovators (with the exception of Rob Marshall). The aero team is really good in utilizing their resources and infrastructure to the fullest, and I am certain they will make good use of it during in-season development too, but I honestly don't remember the last time McLaren introduced an aerodynamic feature that was copied by the others.
I think using wind tunnel hours is not a good reason especially when everything works perfectly. That's my only point against the less wind tunnel time allocation.
Will you be Red Bull facing correlation issues with 15% more tunnel time or be McLaren whose tunnel works always and is state-of-the-art with 15% less tunnel time? Moreover this ignores that Red Bull did develop all the way till Monza on the tunnel and Mexico using CFD. McLaren stopped by Spa by their own admission.
McLarens rear tire cooling was something no one could copy. Likewise as Wache said last year their suspension on the front was extremely aggressive and performance enhacing and of course you can't copy that.
The reality is that McLaren excels in things others simply cannot copy. Which only talks to the strength of the current technical team. For this simple reason they should be there.
The FIA folds on a royal flush.