The car setup didn't respond well to the higher temperatures from Saturday on.
this may be some of the cause of the pace deficit, the mclaren drivers may have been told to target a specific lap time, which would have been slower than 2 stopping team's laptime targetsFittingMechanics wrote: ↑12 May 2019, 20:52Plan A was surely to go one stop. Team messages seem to show that.
"15:59
PIT NOR
Car directly ahead is STR. He's on Soft so he will two-stop. Ahead of him is PER and RIC. We think they will go to the end, so we are racing them."
Now it is a whole other issue whether they would have been able to make the tires last to the end, but it is obvious that was their plan. Whether others around us planned to pit is hard to tell, lot of them were in a similar situation having use two compounds already so they could have gone to the end as well (if the tires lasted).
I do believe that is a different philosophy, even though the previous wing wasn’t all the way towards an outboard solution (Mercedes, RBR), it had that philosophy, the new wing is definitely more of an inboard solution, fairly close to what Ferrari is doing.mwillems wrote:A good result for us today, all said and done.
I'd said after race two that this track and Monaco are the two early tracks where we'd struggle, particularly Monaco. To have got a decent position and to be in 4th still, with one more tricky race to go before we head to tracks that our car will favour, is not a bad position. I believe that we will consolidate 4th position in the races that follow, and reasonably comfortably too.
As for the updates, time will tell to see how the work for us. To the poster who stated that this is not a philosophy change, I tend to agree. It is just a more extreme version of what we already had.
But I do get the feeling that the Merc and RBR solution may well work better so I have mixed feelings here. Not sure right now if we have moved sideways or forwards, but the team seem positive.
Those are the two main factors I believe, however Mercedes have stated in an interview that despite using the full amount of front wing, they are still able to manage outwash at similar levels than last year. This to me seems something special and very different.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑12 May 2019, 22:40I do believe that is a different philosophy, even though the previous wing wasn’t all the way towards an outboard solution (Mercedes, RBR), it had that philosophy, the new wing is definitely more of an inboard solution, fairly close to what Ferrari is doing.mwillems wrote:A good result for us today, all said and done.
I'd said after race two that this track and Monaco are the two early tracks where we'd struggle, particularly Monaco. To have got a decent position and to be in 4th still, with one more tricky race to go before we head to tracks that our car will favour, is not a bad position. I believe that we will consolidate 4th position in the races that follow, and reasonably comfortably too.
As for the updates, time will tell to see how the work for us. To the poster who stated that this is not a philosophy change, I tend to agree. It is just a more extreme version of what we already had.
But I do get the feeling that the Merc and RBR solution may well work better so I have mixed feelings here. Not sure right now if we have moved sideways or forwards, but the team seem positive.
My understanding is that the biggest difference between them is in 2 main factors, how the outwash is manage by the wing itself and how much air is driven towards the bargeboard area... With trade-offs between them... The Merc/RBR type makes it harder to generate outwash, but sends more air towards the bargeboard and the Ferrari/Mcl type makes it easier to create outwash while it blocks or sends less clean air towards the bargeboard... That’s why the Y250 has to be managed in a completely different way for either solution.
I also think that current differences in performance between the types of wings is more related to mechanical grip (suspension) than the wings themselves and is in this area that some teams (Mercedes) is winning the battle and that some teams like Ferrari and McLaren may struggle in the low speed sections.
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Three McLaren stops completed the top three.
Boullier also stopped their practice at one point the past few years. Cuz what's the point.