It's not a single person who works in the carbon shop. It's a group of people, working in shifts. Manufacturing cost might be fixed, but fixed at an unnessasarily high level. Over-capacity is waste.rscsr wrote:The costs from a manufacturing perspective will be negligible. They need the person who produces the carbon work anyway and the carbon fibre itself costs comparatively nothing. Their manufacturing costs are pretty much fixed anyway when they produce the parts themselves. And therefore it would not be smart not to make use of new knowledge. And McLaren should have a strong enough aero department to actually find improvements.ME4ME wrote: ...
The chassis seems to work very well, but I wonder if they aren't over-doing things with all these front wing iterations. It seems they are manufacturing wings for each marginal step they can see in the wind tunnel, but resource-efficiency wise that cannot be optimal.
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Unfortunatley that wouldn't have happened, Had Button got into top 10 it would have knocked Alonzo outlebesset wrote:nice to see team mates thanking each other for help !
first hamilton thanking rosberg for letting him past at monaco [ yes , I know it was team orders but an acknowledgement doesn't hurt
now alonso thanking button for giving him a tow in Q2 and allowing him to squeeze into Q3 at montreal ...pity button made a small mistake on that lap and missed by a whisper ! both cars in Q3 ! how would that have been !!!
mrluke wrote:Congrats to Honda, more competitive at this power circuit than at Monaco
Alonso sugested this on his post qualy interview. I believe they bet hard on wet race and setup accordingly.Sayeman wrote:Were they running higher downforce compared to the other teams? One commentator was talking about it.
Maybe that's why they have been so good on the first 2 sector.
ME4ME wrote:It's not a single person who works in the carbon shop. It's a group of people, working in shifts. Manufacturing cost might be fixed, but fixed at an unnessasarily high level. Over-capacity is waste.rscsr wrote:The costs from a manufacturing perspective will be negligible. They need the person who produces the carbon work anyway and the carbon fibre itself costs comparatively nothing. Their manufacturing costs are pretty much fixed anyway when they produce the parts themselves. And therefore it would not be smart not to make use of new knowledge. And McLaren should have a strong enough aero department to actually find improvements.ME4ME wrote: ...
The chassis seems to work very well, but I wonder if they aren't over-doing things with all these front wing iterations. It seems they are manufacturing wings for each marginal step they can see in the wind tunnel, but resource-efficiency wise that cannot be optimal.
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The amount of design iterations also indicate an trail and error approach. Now every team will do this, but Mclaren to a greater extent. The amount of tweaks they bring seem to suggest that their start-of-season wing wasn't very good, and/or they are unsure of the effictiveness of the upgrades, and which development direction to follow.
Do you really believe the power unit is the reason they're decent here? Anyone who has an even slightly nuanced view of f1 knew that Mclaren's strength in 2nd and 3rd gear corners this season would make them strong here, chassis wise.They've also stated thatwith the Honda PU their aero developmenthas been more efficiency targeted than in the past(when they could afford to use less efficient df because they didn't have a power deficit). That aero work was always going to pay itself back at tracks like this one (though they admitted their unwillingness to add draggy df hurt them at Monaco.)mrluke wrote:Congrats to Honda, more competitive at this power circuit than at Monaco
ME4ME wrote:It's not a single person who works in the carbon shop. It's a group of people, working in shifts. Manufacturing cost might be fixed, but fixed at an unnessasarily high level. Over-capacity is waste.rscsr wrote:The costs from a manufacturing perspective will be negligible. They need the person who produces the carbon work anyway and the carbon fibre itself costs comparatively nothing. Their manufacturing costs are pretty much fixed anyway when they produce the parts themselves. And therefore it would not be smart not to make use of new knowledge. And McLaren should have a strong enough aero department to actually find improvements.ME4ME wrote: ...
The chassis seems to work very well, but I wonder if they aren't over-doing things with all these front wing iterations. It seems they are manufacturing wings for each marginal step they can see in the wind tunnel, but resource-efficiency wise that cannot be optimal.
...
The amount of design iterations also indicate an trail and error approach. Now every team will do this, but Mclaren to a greater extent. The amount of tweaks they bring seem to suggest that their start-of-season wing wasn't very good, and/or they are unsure of the effictiveness of the upgrades, and which development direction to follow.
Well they are running higher downforce which is partially responsible for lower top speed. The PU work gets easily neglected amid all the aero work talk.Pierce89 wrote:Do you really believe the power unit is the reason they're decent here? Anyone who has an even slightly nuanced view of f1 knew that Mclaren's strength in 2nd and 3rd gear corners this season would make them strong here, chassis wise.They've also stated thatwith the Honda PU their aero developmenthas been more efficiency targeted than in the past(when they could afford to use less efficient df because they didn't have a power deficit). That aero work was always going to pay itself back at tracks like this one (though they admitted their unwillingness to add draggy df hurt them at Monaco.)mrluke wrote:Congrats to Honda, more competitive at this power circuit than at Monaco