Looking back on past articles that's all I have to conclude.diffuser wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 21:12Really, you know that for a fact?PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 19:30Because of management demands they slapped on the upgrades onto a wretched base without solving the problems there first. It's a shambles.mwillems wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 19:05If there is some mysterious shenanigans happening with the barge board, i guess that if the new nose is channeling some more air in that direction then it may have made it worse.
But after testing and after 7 races how the hell can they not see the issue? I wonder when they realised that they had a divergence between reality and the wind tunnel. Possibly after fitting the nose and doing aero tests in that area?
Here is one such article. The words chosen by EB hint to the reader that is he was not fully confident in the updates. They were rushed!
"The 2018 car is coming to Barcelona, and obviously we hope that's the car we expect it to be," Boullier told Autosport.
"The car we have now, is as per plan, it's not that we missed the targets with it.
"But we missed the schedule targets with it, which means the car we'll have in Barcelona should have been in Australia.
"So we are running actually with an evolution of last year, and not the new car. And this car hopefully will be the one that we expect."
Boullier admitted that having to contest the first four races with such an obvious restriction had been frustrating for McLaren.
"Yes, but this is what it is. We knew this, and we just have to take the best we can," he said.
"So far we have been opportunistic, and we took the opportunities we've had with both drivers to take as many points as we could.
"It's just frustrating to see that we have such performance or pace in the race, and we are unable to unlock yet that performance in qualifying."