Their first and second updates were not dissimilar to Mclarens in scope to be fair. The first update was a smaller one like ours, the second included sidepods and floor like ours at Austria, with some of their floor updates being "hidden" due to the way they built their floor, they only have to inform of an update to the assembly itself and so it was was built a bit more patchwork than us. They did bring further smaller updates through the season, but nothing like our Singapore update.taperoo2k wrote: ↑01 Dec 2023, 16:40You have to give credit to Zak Brown and the leadership at McLaren for fostering an environment that means McLaren engineers, designers, mechanics and pit crews etc can perform to their very best. If McLaren do manage to catch Red Bull in 2024, then having pit crews able to do sub 2 second pit stops will come in handy. McLaren know what they need to do for 2024.mwillems wrote: ↑29 Nov 2023, 19:07I think you need to give credit to the team, they repeatedly extracted time from the car and improved it massively. Everyone knows what the car can and can't do, it's talent that fixes it and we did exactly that. I think it is also wrong to assume that if we'd started the season with the Baku spec, that the team still wouldn't have known how to find a big chunk of time, I think they know exactly how to keep improving this car beyond what they got to in Singapore.taperoo2k wrote: ↑29 Nov 2023, 14:31
I think you need to temper your expectations, the RB19 was the class of the field in 2023. McLaren knew what the problem was at the start of the season with their car and followed a plan to rectify it alongside technical changes that have paid off.
For McLaren to have any chance at beating Red Bull they have to hit the ground running in 2024 and have found a development path that outsmarts Red Bull, Mercedes and Ferrari. It's a tall order.
As for the engine deal? It's not a works type deal, it's Mercedes being strategic as ever. Strong customer teams = data that can be used to improve the power units. Doesn't mean McLaren will benefit from that immediately.
The penalty for Red Bull certainly helped and I'm sure they will be faster than us next year, but nobody matched the Mclaren for in season development this year and if RB had brought one more big upgrade we'd still have made up a big chunk of time over the season I think.
Red Bull didn't really need to bring many updates to the RB19, given how quick the RB19 is and how Max seemed able to extract performance from the car when he needed it. Most of the time he was cruising to victory he was that far ahead. Newey appears to have shifted his focus onto the RB20 some time ago.
I hope McLaren are able to challenge Red Bull properly in 2024. I tend to think Oscar might well be the wild card if it's a fight between Red Bull and McLaren.
We definitely brought more, but I challenge the idea that some think RB stood still, far from it, in fact they were also able to bring some more track specific parts like Rear and Beam wings, for example for DF below the Singapore spec wing we hadn't updated any of our rear wings at all whereas RB had a wider array of track specific options I think that were more efficient than ours.