I’m intrigued to see how the MCL34 would handle in the wet. On the driver side, I believe both drivers shine in wet conditions. Carlos seems particularly competent in the wet-dry changing conditions.godlameroso wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 13:57Looking more likely to rain on Sunday. Friday will be hot, the rest of the weekend very different.
Carlos was amazing in a wet quali last year (Hungary I believe). Not sure about Lando, he has done good in other series, so he will probably be good in F1 too. If we have a wet quali/race and the team executes it correctly, I believe we have the drivers to get some great points.Ground Effect wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 14:18I’m intrigued to see how the MCL34 would handle in the wet. On the driver side, I believe both drivers shine in wet conditions. Carlos seems particularly competent in the wet-dry changing conditions.godlameroso wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 13:57Looking more likely to rain on Sunday. Friday will be hot, the rest of the weekend very different.
I believe it's the other way round. High downforce cars do better in the rain. The rain effects the mechanical grip of the car. So having more mechanical grip won't really help.Jackles-UK wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 21:27Surely if it rains, a car which is comparatively weak in slow speed corners will suffer more than those that are weak elsewhere? Mechanical grip is far more important to wet weather times than it is in the dry where the aero grip is king.
His wet drive in Hungary was stunningEmag wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 15:04Carlos was amazing in a wet quali last year (Hungary I believe). Not sure about Lando, he has done good in other series, so he will probably be good in F1 too. If we have a wet quali/race and the team executes it correctly, I believe we have the drivers to get some great points.Ground Effect wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 14:18I’m intrigued to see how the MCL34 would handle in the wet. On the driver side, I believe both drivers shine in wet conditions. Carlos seems particularly competent in the wet-dry changing conditions.godlameroso wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 13:57Looking more likely to rain on Sunday. Friday will be hot, the rest of the weekend very different.
Mclaren should do well again. They themselves always believe they had a top class chassis , it was the engines that let them down always. it was honda before that let them down now its the renault engines.I´d say both of you are correct, in the rain more corners become slow speed corners, so mechanical grip is key, but also drag become less of an issue, so cars with higher level of DF, even if it´s not very efficient, shine in the rain
McLaren don´t have good mechanical grip, and his current aero philosophy is efficiency, not peak DF, so I´d say the rain will not be good for McLaren
@gokarter - I rated it down as I can see you are trying to start antoher Mclaren - Honda war on this thread.gokarter wrote: ↑24 Jul 2019, 09:47Mclaren should do well again. They themselves always believe they had a top class chassis , it was the engines that let them down always. it was honda before that let them down now its the renault engines.I´d say both of you are correct, in the rain more corners become slow speed corners, so mechanical grip is key, but also drag become less of an issue, so cars with higher level of DF, even if it´s not very efficient, shine in the rain
McLaren don´t have good mechanical grip, and his current aero philosophy is efficiency, not peak DF, so I´d say the rain will not be good for McLaren
Carlos is usually very good in wet so it would be great to see him if it rains on Sunday.Marc.W wrote: ↑24 Jul 2019, 08:40His wet drive in Hungary was stunningEmag wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 15:04Carlos was amazing in a wet quali last year (Hungary I believe). Not sure about Lando, he has done good in other series, so he will probably be good in F1 too. If we have a wet quali/race and the team executes it correctly, I believe we have the drivers to get some great points.Ground Effect wrote: ↑23 Jul 2019, 14:18
I’m intrigued to see how the MCL34 would handle in the wet. On the driver side, I believe both drivers shine in wet conditions. Carlos seems particularly competent in the wet-dry changing conditions.
Agree but with a slightly different reasoning, the slow speed behavior and high speed behavior seems to be fine to me.Andres125sx wrote: ↑24 Jul 2019, 07:59I´d say both of you are correct, in the rain more corners become slow speed corners, so mechanical grip is key, but also drag become less of an issue, so cars with higher level of DF, even if it´s not very efficient, shine in the rain
McLaren don´t have good mechanical grip, and his current aero philosophy is efficiency, not peak DF, so I´d say the rain will not be good for McLaren
Mclaren must have hurt your feelings so much. In all seriousness that idiotic joke died the first 300 times.gokarter wrote: ↑24 Jul 2019, 09:47Mclaren should do well again. They themselves always believe they had a top class chassis , it was the engines that let them down always. it was honda before that let them down now its the renault engines.I´d say both of you are correct, in the rain more corners become slow speed corners, so mechanical grip is key, but also drag become less of an issue, so cars with higher level of DF, even if it´s not very efficient, shine in the rain
McLaren don´t have good mechanical grip, and his current aero philosophy is efficiency, not peak DF, so I´d say the rain will not be good for McLaren
Probably track dependent too.Xero wrote: ↑24 Jul 2019, 22:00Mechanical grip comes in different forms. McLaren seem to struggle with lateral grip when the car rolls, but their traction and braking ability are among the best right now. In wet conditions I'd say the latter becomes more important as you tend to generate less roll in the car. I reckon they'd be just fine, I think they've improved the issue over the last few races. Think I mentioned this before, but Hockenheim is more reliant on traction in the first 2 sectors. The last sector will possibly hurt them though.