Plus the parts have to get to Cologne. If you have paid for the time but realise there is no point wasting your wind tunnel time cap on a part, do you still have to pay for the time in the tunnel? Can all changes that need to be made to a part in response to initial data from the tunnel be made in Cologne?diffuser wrote: ↑19 May 2020, 06:57Yeah, my understanding was they just missed the tire wake messing the side pod flow in curves. Thought the cap was the trigger for building the tunnel. That it will be harder to build when the ccap is in place.Jackles-UK wrote: ↑18 May 2020, 14:14It was one of the theories kicking around as to why they missed the terrible issue with the 2018 car but, like you say, it was never officially confirmed by the team. Modern wind tunnels can more accurately simulate the forces when the car is in yaw or experiencing cross-winds and I don’t think the Toyota one can quite as effectively.
The fact that McLaren are only now spending huge money on a brand new, state-of-the-art wind tunnel at the MTC so soon after an issue with correlation only adds fuel to the fire.
You probably save money on paying for hotels, air, misc expenses for the crews and transportation costs for pieces. It's easily $1000 per week per person +air.
Plus right now....not certain anyone can travel to Cologne.
I feel like it would add both time and money to the design process.