vyselegend wrote:But the fact is the car went on fire, because the heat shield was saturated by the high temperature, which, excuse me, come obviously from an overheated engine.
hmmm, I think You've got the point... Monaco is definitely the race to put some risk in, if Your car is not so competitive... Hungary and France too - remember Alonso 2003 in Hungary, and 2004. in France, Trulli 2004. in Monaco...vyselegend wrote:... and I suspect they were once again secretly in a one GP engine strategy as I suspect they often were last year...
yes, quite strange... as far as I know You need long straights to cool off engine properly, as in curves radiator does not get full capacity of airflow, so in Monaco larger ones are needed... but they probably know something we don't...vyselegend wrote:There is also something strange about the team running a smaller (and yet untested ) radiator here, as, according to commentators, nearly all the teams were doing the contrary, running new larger ones, not only for Monaco but because we're comming to the summer races period.
get a life mclaren fanatic "the bets car in the field"" its a joke the best car is a renault or a ferrariRACKITUP wrote:Its clear that the McLaren is the best car in the field, abiet its damn engine; its aerodynamics and chassis being sublime.
Aerodynamics play a major roll on an F1 car, not just to provide downforce, but turbulating the air, and external heat dissipation.
Because McLarens aerodynamics are so good (ie external heat dissipation through gills and chimneys etc) it allows them to run a reduced intake area to the radiators which can significantly minimise drag.
Just seems that this time, they were too aggressive with the compromise between heat dissipators and intake size in the worst case scenario that developed; following Renault for so long, coupled with the safety car period.
Does that mean Kimi will be deducted 10 places at Silverstone, or was Monaco the "2nd race"?
rkp