I'm really not sure McLaren will be able to switch engine
It may be that 2020 season will happen in 2021.
Its a lot of cost and resources for something they are not sure is a big advantage.
I think it goes the other way around ..... if you're switching to a new PU, the work to bring the New PU in leaves less time to do other things ...
True.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑19 Mar 2020, 22:25Obviously we don’t have access to Mclaren’s contracts with either Renault and Mercedes, but those contracts are agreed per year, not per regulation... So they shouldn’t have any other option... Whether that would be a good or a bad things is a different story, at least the interesting part is that they (as long as the other teams) will have an opportunity to keep developing these year’s cars.
Personally, I would love to see the potential of Mclaren with the Mercedes PU in the current regulations.
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It’s been reported he’s free of symptoms now, recovering well. The other members in isolation all tested negative.godlameroso wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 04:29I wonder how the McLaren employee is doing, I hope he's recovering well.
What layout issues ? Also RBR when they used the Renault PU had the slimmest layout even then. RBR have gotten slimmer now but they got slimmer every year with Renault. So how much of that is the Honda PU, how much is less colling requirement or how much of that is just refinement of the cooling design I have no idea.Mansell89 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 10:04To be fair I’m impressed with how slim McLaren have managed to get with the Renault given the well know layout issue that it causes. Hopefully this means they can accommodate the Mercedes without any major compromise to their philosophy.
Having a year with Merc prior to the new regulations is fantastic news in terms of getting optimised for the (now) 2022 regulation change.
That's great! I took me nearly a month to completely eliminate the virus. Just when I can go out again everything is going on lockdown.Ground Effect wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 13:00It’s been reported he’s free of symptoms now, recovering well. The other members in isolation all tested negative.godlameroso wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 04:29I wonder how the McLaren employee is doing, I hope he's recovering well.
The transmission and its cooling requirements are a huge limiting factor with how slim the rear end can be made. McLaren has invested a lot of resources and development to improve their transmission. The power unit has pluses and minuses regarding packaging, but nothing McLaren can do much about, as they don't build it. They do build the transmission however, as well as all the heat exchangers and how that's packaged is huge in terms of aero potential.diffuser wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 13:35What layout issues ? Also RBR when they used the Renault PU had the slimmest layout even then. RBR have gotten slimmer now but they got slimmer every year with Renault. So how much of that is the Honda PU, how much is less colling requirement or how much of that is just refinement of the cooling design I have no idea.Mansell89 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2020, 10:04To be fair I’m impressed with how slim McLaren have managed to get with the Renault given the well know layout issue that it causes. Hopefully this means they can accommodate the Mercedes without any major compromise to their philosophy.
Having a year with Merc prior to the new regulations is fantastic news in terms of getting optimised for the (now) 2022 regulation change.