jh199 wrote:M840TR wrote: ↑23 Mar 2019, 13:52
mwillems wrote: ↑23 Mar 2019, 05:21
It's possible they run low down force because they cant get enough df on the front wing and therefore cant increase the rear wing too much.
Can you elaborate your point a bit?
I believe he is trying to say that Mclaren have more downforce generating potential at the rear of the car but they are not exploiting this potential because they cannot balance the downforce at the front end. If they do in fact produce their maximum downforce at the rear of the car, the car would then be unbalanced as they cannot produce the necessary downforce at the front of the car. This would, of course, lead to a car with a lot of understeer. I think this is what mwilliams is saying. It is always easier to produce the necessary downforce with the front wing however so I personally don't believe this reasoning.
I have 2 guesses (so they could be way off the mark)... But, when designing a new car, you should can either shoot for a design that maximizes performance in some type of races or that has average performance in a wide array of races.
I believe that Mclaren designed a car that should provide them good results in most medium to low downforce tracks with the intention of improving the car for the high downforce tracks during the year (finishing with a car that works well in a wider array of races)... Going through this design path allows them to have a larger probability of point making opportunities during the season (because the amount of tracks that require low downforce setups exceeds the tracks that require high downforce).
This is something that Williams did back in 2014-2015 if I’m not wrong... Had a car that was very quick in low downforce tracks, but struggled in high downforce and ended third both years in the Championship.
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