
Umm, Sainz nearly got lapped in 2019, their race pace was atrocious, they qualified well, other than that, it was a weekend to forget. They were actually much closer, race pace wise, in Barcelona than they were in France.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑23 May 2021, 23:02The current configuration at Paul Ricard isn’t related to S3 at Barcelona, which is slower and not as fluid.godlameroso wrote:There are some frustratingly slow corners, the sequence before the chicane straight requires good low speed cornering and grip to get on the power early. The exit of the chicane is very important, and the final two corners are very slow. The beginning of the lap, and that triple right hander should be good, but the rest of sector 3 is very Barcelona-esque. Very long corners, culminating in the slowest corner on the track which is also very important for the lap time.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑23 May 2021, 21:30
I don’t think France is as similar to Barcelona though... At least it doesn’t have an slow section like S3 in Cataluña... It was actually a very solid track for the MCL34 in 2019 and the MCL35M is a clear step forward versus that car, if not for Norris’ mechanical issues, both would have finished in good positions in that race... I actually expect them to do better in France than Baku in relative terms
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Sector 3 is like taking turn 5 7 and old turn 10 of Barcelona, and juxtaposing them in some weird inverted way. McLaren was not that great around those types of corners. It was easier in Monaco because they could get the front end turned in with setup, but on long corners, the suspension settles and it's nothing you can do with setup, it's just the inherent downforce of the car carrying you.
On corner entry, or exit, and sometimes the mid corner phase you can take advantage of the aero pitch sensitivity of the car, and use the brakes and the throttle to alter the ride height. It's a lot harder to do that with long steady corners, you spend more time just hanging on.
You can lift a little on entry which will put the nose closer to the ground, which will further help your turn in. In an aero formula, when and how you get on and off the power has some influence in how you get the aero working. Even if there's no exhaust blowing the diffuser, the way the car pitches forwards and backwards and how it rolls all affects the aero platform and subtleties in driving style can make the aero work better or worse.
Also, here's another thing to consider, those venetian blinds on the sidepods, they have to be interacting with the walls. Ground effect doesn't just work on the ground
The closest reference point for Mclaren would be at the 2019 French GP, where after not having great performance in Spain, they had one of their strongest weekends at Paul Ricard... Considering that the current car addresses most of the weaknesses of the MCL34, it should be a good weekend for the team.
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You maybe forgetting that in Spain 2019 there was a Safety Car in lap 46... Therefore you can’t really compare the delta to the leaders between both races... And that Norris had hydraulic issues with 5 laps from the end in France, without those he would have finished a couple of spots ahead).godlameroso wrote:Umm, Sainz nearly got lapped in 2019, their race pace was atrocious, they qualified well, other than that, it was a weekend to forget. They were actually much closer, race pace wise, in Barcelona than they were in France.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑23 May 2021, 23:02The current configuration at Paul Ricard isn’t related to S3 at Barcelona, which is slower and not as fluid.godlameroso wrote: There are some frustratingly slow corners, the sequence before the chicane straight requires good low speed cornering and grip to get on the power early. The exit of the chicane is very important, and the final two corners are very slow. The beginning of the lap, and that triple right hander should be good, but the rest of sector 3 is very Barcelona-esque. Very long corners, culminating in the slowest corner on the track which is also very important for the lap time.
Sector 3 is like taking turn 5 7 and old turn 10 of Barcelona, and juxtaposing them in some weird inverted way. McLaren was not that great around those types of corners. It was easier in Monaco because they could get the front end turned in with setup, but on long corners, the suspension settles and it's nothing you can do with setup, it's just the inherent downforce of the car carrying you.
On corner entry, or exit, and sometimes the mid corner phase you can take advantage of the aero pitch sensitivity of the car, and use the brakes and the throttle to alter the ride height. It's a lot harder to do that with long steady corners, you spend more time just hanging on.
You can lift a little on entry which will put the nose closer to the ground, which will further help your turn in. In an aero formula, when and how you get on and off the power has some influence in how you get the aero working. Even if there's no exhaust blowing the diffuser, the way the car pitches forwards and backwards and how it rolls all affects the aero platform and subtleties in driving style can make the aero work better or worse.
Also, here's another thing to consider, those venetian blinds on the sidepods, they have to be interacting with the walls. Ground effect doesn't just work on the ground
The closest reference point for Mclaren would be at the 2019 French GP, where after not having great performance in Spain, they had one of their strongest weekends at Paul Ricard... Considering that the current car addresses most of the weaknesses of the MCL34, it should be a good weekend for the team.
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I didn't get the chance to watch the race, who barged him off the road?
I hear you. I just can't see any negativity coming back on McLaren or their sponsors for it, or perception of the team taking a hit. Objectively they are fighting for 'justice' and it's a better position to be in than the team who may be found guilty. Everyone respects the good guys and no-one wants to be associated with a cheat.mwillems wrote: ↑23 May 2021, 16:13I've already explained why.El Scorchio wrote: ↑23 May 2021, 10:44Why on earth would any (non trash clickbait) media outlet report that a team protesting something on another car is running scared of a challenge? Hasn’t happened before as far as I recall and I don’t see it happening here if McLaren protest flexible rear wings.mwillems wrote: ↑23 May 2021, 09:57
I see where you're coming from, I just think that a lot of media, print media in particular can use those situations to spin a story. Reality doesn't have to come into play.
Like I said, I dont disagree with your rational, just that once you escalate beyond a certain level than you can lose control.
Merc don't have to go to the ICA themselves for newspapers to print snide stories of a team afraid of a real challenge.
In the last few years: (that I recall off the top of my head)
Red Bull with DAS
Red Bull with party mode
Red Bull/Merc with Ferrari engine
Renault with RP brakes
None of these teams who protested has a damaged reputation or backlash because of it. If anything, Ferrari and RP are the only two from the above examples and they were both being protested about. Red Bull’s reputation and brand would have fallen through the floor if protesting was damaging. Why would it be different for McLaren with this?
Because when it escalates beyond a normal protest and to a higher arbitration, it stops being something that makes it to a small F1 article and makes more print in the kind of places where they like to spin a story.
For Mercedes, it isn't a coincidence that they just started complaining about it when they feel a challenge from Red Bull. Horner and Wolff had been discussing it for a while. This was no "I just noticed, and blurted it out in the interview" from Hamilton. Everyone knew and Merc orchestrated it to be as innocuous a protest as possible. The reality is they are struggling on track so they are pushing back off it. They are feeling it and looking for ways to get breathing space. When you spend time saying you welcome competition and then start arbitration when you do feel it, people can go to town on that if they want, and I have no doubt they will if it goes beyond a protest. Do you want that just to bring it forward a few races. Possibly but I think it is just bluster and they won't get their hands dirty.
Logic doesn't come in to how things are perceived, and taking legal action to try and swing a championship in your favour (Merc) or to bring RB closer to you (Mclaren) would be percieved differently inside of F1 than out (Which would be less forgiving). This kind of action would reach outside of F1 more than events normally would and that negative reception is a risk to the brands.