Jep, that works perfectly.
Mansell89 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 13:55I like the refinements and continuation of concepts. Think back to 2013 when for some unknown reason McLaren went for a whole new concept and got it wrong in the final year of regs.
Hopefully this will be a much more positive year although no doubt highly competitive and very close.
Starting to see more of a Mercedes style fitting in now. I just don’t know what it is about the Mercedes works cars but everything about them just looks perfectly in balance. Forget the aero and little bits - there’s just something when I look at their car like it looks like it is glueing itself to the ground that I don’t feel when I look at other cars. I’ve always felt they have some sort of innate advantage right at the heart or base of their concept.
Does anyone know what I mean?
So sorry that I’m such a technically clueless poster but at least my enthusiasm is there!
He’s Loic Serra, that happened in 2016, I believe. Another guy who agreed to come to McLaren then changed his mind. Anyone remember Dan Fallows from Red Bull? Was supposed to come along with Prodromou.f1rules wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 14:52Yeah, i had a feeling it was damper/suspension but i dont know, i know mclaren had an agreement with the person responsible for vehicle dynamics(Loic something)at mercedes which is where they exel, but unfortunately merc convinced him to stay in the last moment, when they became aware he was leaving he would have been a great addition no doubt, but soon all these insane suspension systems are outlawed and back to more simple systems so
but yeah 2013 was hard, i spoke to one of the mclaren engineers at that time, he says even to this day it hunts him.
Basicly just before mid season they had not the best of results, leaving them doubt if their platform was good enough for next year, they decided it was not, short after they had a setup breakthrough and suddenly the car came alive and performed amazingly, but they where to far with the new concept and continued with, and as it unfortunately turned out, the new concept had some inbuild flaws, which he understandably would not get in to
Mansell89 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 13:55I like the refinements and continuation of concepts. Think back to 2013 when for some unknown reason McLaren went for a whole new concept and got it wrong in the final year of regs.
Hopefully this will be a much more positive year although no doubt highly competitive and very close.
Starting to see more of a Mercedes style fitting in now. I just don’t know what it is about the Mercedes works cars but everything about them just looks perfectly in balance. Forget the aero and little bits - there’s just something when I look at their car like it looks like it is glueing itself to the ground that I don’t feel when I look at other cars. I’ve always felt they have some sort of innate advantage right at the heart or base of their concept.
Does anyone know what I mean?
So sorry that I’m such a technically clueless poster but at least my enthusiasm is there!
That's more of a subjective opinion though, don't you think?PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 03:05I didn't really consider that one a Mercedes cape. Its certainly mclaren's own thing for their nose design. It very likely works differentlty too.
“While the changes take downforce away from the rear, it forces you to take some off the front to rebalance the car, so there’s been a global reduction in downforce.”
No, balance is not simply about have equal downforce, it’s about how the car reacts at different speedsmclaren111 wrote: ↑20 Feb 2021, 11:10http://www.f1reader.com/list/news/lates ... rce-271097
Key:
“While the changes take downforce away from the rear, it forces you to take some off the front to rebalance the car, so there’s been a global reduction in downforce.”
Is he saying our understeer problem of last year was not downforce related but mechanical ??
Wasn't the issue that Paddy tried to implement changes in how the team worked/internal structure and that put a lot of people's backs up. And then morale plummeted and performance went with it.Emag wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 18:07I wonder what exactly went on with Paddy Lowe and Williams. I feel like he might have been scapegoated and took the blame because he was in charge. There's no way someone like Paddy, who has designed one of the most complicated suspension software ever in Formula 1, could --- up a car so much it practically brought Williams to the brink of bankruptcy.
After all, there's only so much responsibility a man can have (and that's for both the good and the bad), especially in the complex world of Formula 1 nowadays. I don't know if Paddy returned to McLaren would be good or not, but I guess he wouldn't return at this point for anything less than a managerial / leader engineering role. Wouldn't be a great idea to spark power competition within the structure now that James Key has been pointed in charge.
Still, a man of his knowledge would definitely be beneficial to any team, if you take aside all the "political" disadvantages.
No its not.mwillems wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 20:04That's more of a subjective opinion though, don't you think?PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 03:05I didn't really consider that one a Mercedes cape. Its certainly mclaren's own thing for their nose design. It very likely works differentlty too.
Morale was always low (no lun intended). If we go by team member comments.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑20 Feb 2021, 12:02Wasn't the issue that Paddy tried to implement changes in how the team worked/internal structure and that put a lot of people's backs up. And then morale plummeted and performance went with it.Emag wrote: ↑19 Feb 2021, 18:07I wonder what exactly went on with Paddy Lowe and Williams. I feel like he might have been scapegoated and took the blame because he was in charge. There's no way someone like Paddy, who has designed one of the most complicated suspension software ever in Formula 1, could --- up a car so much it practically brought Williams to the brink of bankruptcy.
After all, there's only so much responsibility a man can have (and that's for both the good and the bad), especially in the complex world of Formula 1 nowadays. I don't know if Paddy returned to McLaren would be good or not, but I guess he wouldn't return at this point for anything less than a managerial / leader engineering role. Wouldn't be a great idea to spark power competition within the structure now that James Key has been pointed in charge.
Still, a man of his knowledge would definitely be beneficial to any team, if you take aside all the "political" disadvantages.