The package introduced in BCN worked on Spanish GP, but after that took them completly in the wrong direction.
Why is that?
Admittedly I am not an EB fan (far too arrogant for my liking), but he would have known about these issues if he had the correct procedures and processes in place & a bit of hands-on management.
Let's agree to disagree.godlameroso wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 12:24Boullier is not an engineer, he's a manager. They fired the engineer that was supposed to coordinate the different departments.
On Boullier being an engineer?mclaren111 wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 13:01Let's agree to disagree.godlameroso wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 12:24Boullier is not an engineer, he's a manager. They fired the engineer that was supposed to coordinate the different departments.
Was OK at BCN and good at Monaco. Why is it now so terrible? Two very different tracks.
I think because it haven't been totally implemented where as other teams had and evolve their car. That's why I refered to the factory oveloaded sisce September, I don't think they are capable of producing the parts necessary as fast as they would like because the workers are not giving more, hence the rummors of revolt, so either they are actually having correlation problems that it wasn't the case until last race or it is an excuse to the press to buy some time summer brake is near.
Because the other teams upgraded their cars better than McLaren was able to, now they're behind until the next raft of upgrades come in.
That's because the straights aren't extremely long in Spain and Monaco, which means you can run more downforce to fix the low speed traction. On high speed tracks like Paul Richard and Canada you'll get heavily punished for running more downforce. Barcelona is also a track that they know as their back pocket, which makes their life a lot easier setup wise. But let's not forget they were 1,3 seconds slower then the Red Bull in Monaco, a track that takes only 1:10 to complete.mwillems wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 13:53Possibly, but even if they cut back on overtime they'd still be producing updates and moving forward. My own though is that they are prioritising finding and fixing the existing issue. But still, I personally don't feel this explains what is happening with the car in relation to Mclarens explanation. We have issues with low speed traction but both BCN and MON have low speed traction and we weren't bad.
Ultimately I'm trying to tie up Mclarens reasoning to what we can see on the track, and I don't see it. I might just not have enough knowledge to understand, but nobody here really seems to be able to tie up the question of Monaco and BCN good performance to the issue of low speed traction issues, they do not correlate. Like I said, I'm not knowledgeable and I'm not trying to say that the explanation definitely doesn't fit, but please, someone show me how?
I think there are a few assumptions here:Dipesh1995 wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 23:59
The thing is it’s not like they’ve stood relatively still in terms of chassis performance between MCL32 and MCL33. The MCL33 is a significantly poorer chassis than the 32. Their qualifying in Spain (a real car performance track) really showed that where they only managed to close the deficit to the top by 3 tenths (1.9 seconds in 2017 compared to 1.6 seconds in 2018 if I recall correctly) despite having a significantly better PU and 12 months of additional chassis development time.
I think they’ve done another 2013 but worse where they had a great car in 2012 and came up with a dog in 2013.
Marca already reported in May that McLaren was aware of correlation issues before the Chinese grand prix.mwillems wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 13:53Possibly, but even if they cut back on overtime they'd still be producing updates and moving forward. My own though is that they are prioritising finding and fixing the existing issue. But still, I personally don't feel this explains what is happening with the car in relation to Mclarens explanation. We have issues with low speed traction but both BCN and MON have low speed traction and we weren't bad.
Ultimately I'm trying to tie up Mclarens reasoning to what we can see on the track, and I don't see it. I might just not have enough knowledge to understand, but nobody here really seems to be able to tie up the question of Monaco and BCN good performance to the issue of low speed traction issues, they do not correlate. Like I said, I'm not knowledgeable and I'm not trying to say that the explanation definitely doesn't fit, but please, someone show me how?
No - I want him gone and you don'tgodlameroso wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 13:14On Boullier being an engineer?mclaren111 wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 13:01Let's agree to disagree.godlameroso wrote: ↑25 Jun 2018, 12:24Boullier is not an engineer, he's a manager. They fired the engineer that was supposed to coordinate the different departments.