The air intake behind the airbox on the Mclaren is for an Oil-radiator.
I can only assume that because of their unique sidepods, packaging dictates that behind the airbox is the only available place
Could be completely wrong, but I believe that at high speeds air spills out from the snorkel so having the additional cooling there may even tidy up the airflow to the rear wing.Robbobnob wrote:The air intake behind the airbox on the Mclaren is for an Oil-radiator.
I can only assume that because of their unique sidepods, packaging dictates that behind the airbox is the only available place
Interesting looking at that it appears to still be the long-chord rear wing. Their short chord one uses a switching mechanism in a long black housing like RBR's – that one still has the lever for the long chord.Owen.C93 wrote:Looks like a little bit of black shrouding on the exhaust to tidy it up, it now looks almost identical to preseason RB lol.
McLaren like to test new stuff in FP1/2, so we could see it showing up there. IIRC Button was using it in FP2 Silverstonebeelsebob wrote:Interesting looking at that it appears to still be the long-chord rear wing. Their short chord one uses a switching mechanism in a long black housing like RBR's – that one still has the lever for the long chord.Owen.C93 wrote:Looks like a little bit of black shrouding on the exhaust to tidy it up, it now looks almost identical to preseason RB lol.
They'll use old wings for pit stop practice anyway to avoid damage. No doubt they will be testing it in FP and make a decision after that.beelsebob wrote:Interesting looking at that it appears to still be the long-chord rear wing. Their short chord one uses a switching mechanism in a long black housing like RBR's – that one still has the lever for the long chord.Owen.C93 wrote:Looks like a little bit of black shrouding on the exhaust to tidy it up, it now looks almost identical to preseason RB lol.
To be fair, the title of the article (as usual) is misleading. He's being realistic. The RB8 will be a natural progression fromt he RB6, which was a progression from the RB5. COmpare that with the MP4-25 and 26 which were both essentially new designs (for the most part), and he's right in thinking that Red BUll will more than likely have a head start next season. What he did say is that the time to catchup to them may be less because the MP4-27 will be more an evaluation, and hopefully take less time to figure out/get the bugs out.marcush. wrote:http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/93944
Hamilton mnot happy with the current car...thinking it needs more downforce...drivers are drivers ..last year he was full of praise for a car that hardly matched the Bulls on speed ..and now he start already to moan about mp4-27 for lagging behind....
beelsebob wrote:Interesting looking at that it appears to still be the long-chord rear wing. Their short chord one uses a switching mechanism in a long black housing like RBR's – that one still has the lever for the long chord.
Much betterTheWiseOwl wrote:Happy now?
he's speaking the truth though. The EBD is a big band aid for the car.marcush. wrote:http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/93944
Hamilton mnot happy with the current car...thinking it needs more downforce...drivers are drivers ..last year he was full of praise for a car that hardly matched the Bulls on speed ..and now he start already to moan about mp4-27 for lagging behind....
Interestingly, the BBC have an article where he's saying he thinks that next year they'll have a big deficit to RBR at the start of the year, but that the current design will mostly translate to next year. Odd that if it's so reliant on EBD it would translate well.ringo wrote:he's speaking the truth though. The EBD is a big band aid for the car.