I suspect this might be the benefit of the snowplough. The MP4/25 also had a very strong front end last year.raymondu999 wrote:I think it's clear in the last two races that the McLaren front end is absolutely mighty. It's a lot stronger in the slow corners and the turn-in and direction change in the slow speed corners is awesome. Does anyone know why this is? Or at least which parts contribute to this?
beelsebob wrote: Haha, I made a thread a while ago proposing something like this – the biggest issue is fuelling it. The rules ban providing fuel to anything other than the engine.
IMHO= Mclaren has caught up in rear downforce aspect to the point of creating aero understeer. Once this happens, you can now create more downforce in the front to balance the car, where you couldn't do this previously.raymondu999 wrote:I think it's clear in the last two races that the McLaren front end is absolutely mighty. It's a lot stronger in the slow corners and the turn-in and direction change in the slow speed corners is awesome. Does anyone know why this is? Or at least which parts contribute to this?
http://www.f1zone.net/news/tyre-enginee ... aren/8149/There is a secret to McLaren’s recent success, according to the German trade magazine Auto Motor und Sport.
With Lewis Hamilton and then Jenson Button winning the most recent German and Hungarian grands prix, the report said a big reason for the erosion of Red Bull’s dominance is a Japanese engineer.
Hiroshi Imai, who until 2009 was former F1 supplier Bridgestone’s chief engineer, is now working at McLaren on unlocking the secrets of the heavily-degrading Pirellis.
“He seems to have made a breakthrough,” said Auto Motor und Sport, revealing that McLaren has worked to better cool the brakes so that the heat is not transferred to the tyres
I think it's not a new news. I read similar article last year.Gaara wrote:Tyre engineer unlocks secrets for McLarenhttp://www.f1zone.net/news/tyre-enginee ... aren/8149/There is a secret to McLaren’s recent success, according to the German trade magazine Auto Motor und Sport.
With Lewis Hamilton and then Jenson Button winning the most recent German and Hungarian grands prix, the report said a big reason for the erosion of Red Bull’s dominance is a Japanese engineer.
Hiroshi Imai, who until 2009 was former F1 supplier Bridgestone’s chief engineer, is now working at McLaren on unlocking the secrets of the heavily-degrading Pirellis.
“He seems to have made a breakthrough,” said Auto Motor und Sport, revealing that McLaren has worked to better cool the brakes so that the heat is not transferred to the tyres
n smikle wrote:I say it is the engine.
Engine mapping(optimized the blown diffuser). One reason that Force India is also on the rise. At least that is what I've heard "around the paddock".Holm86 wrote:n smikle wrote:I say it is the engine.
Because theyve done what to the engine that makes it faster all of the sudden?
We have to remember the W02 is the Igor of F1. It's chassis is a foot dragging hunch back compared to the civil and conventional design of the Force india.marcush. wrote:if it were engine ,why is W02 struggling?
MercedesGP has introduced the state of the art exhausts in Silverstone and has not made significant steps forward since then.If the engine mapping would help with this exhaust configuaration the jump of W02 to the front should be first and most significant and then Mclaren followed by FI.
To me it looks more like Mclaren dragged FI with them to the fore and Mercedes gets left behind a bit ...and that would make sense if it were a development of Mclaren engineering .