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1988 McLaren MP4/4

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1988 McLaren MP4/4 The McLaren chassis, 1988 McLaren MP4/4 Powered by the new Honda engines with 650 PS (478 kW;641 bhp), Ayrton Senna signed to partner Alain Prost to drive The 1988 McLaren MP4/4

The McLaren MP4/4 was a highly successful Formula 1 car that competed in the 1988 Formula One season. It was designed by American engineer Steve Nichols, with assistance from the team's Technical Director Gordon Murray. Nichols based the design on the lowline Brabham BT55, designed by Murray for the 1986 season when Murray was chief designer at Brabham. It is one of the most dominant Formula One cars ever built, winning all but one race in the 1988 season.

1988 McLaren MP4/4 The McLaren chassis, 1988 McLaren MP4/4 Powered by the new Honda engines with 650 PS (478 kW;641 bhp), Ayrton Senna signed to partner Alain Prost to drive The 1988 McLaren MP4/4

1988 McLaren MP4/4 Origin
After a relatively disappointing 1987, when the McLaren-TAG Porsche lost out nine times to the dominant Honda-powered Williams, twice to Lotus with their Honda engines, and twice in the latter stages to Ferrari, taking only three wins. McLaren secured the 1.5L V6 Honda turbo engines, the most powerful in F1 at the time. With the engines coming at the expense of Williams, a strong 1988 was possible. 1988 was due to be the last year for the turbo engines before they were banned, so most teams were making a concerted effort to establish themselves with naturally aspirated cars. Nichols and Murray went ahead with the design of the car on a purely turbo engined basis, which put the team at a distinct advantage over their rivals.The lowline chassis layout was pioneered in 1986 when Murray was at Brabham. The idea being that a low car with a reduced front area of about 30% would be more aerodynamically efficient and allow more air to pass over the rear wing causing more downforce to be produced, but without excessive drag. In theory this sounded great, with cornering speeds unaffected and straight line speeds improved as less air needed to be moved by the car. In practice though, the slanted Straight 4 BMW engine used in the Brabham proved troublesome in this layout with fuel starvation problems, oil starvation, and engine installation issues plaguing the BT55. While the BT55 was generally among the quickest cars in a straight line, the car suffered a lack of downforce in the corners and the oil starvation problems, added to the BMW's legendary turbo lag (often around 2 seconds), saw to it that acceleration was severely lacking compared to its rivals. Overall the cars problems made the BT55 generally uncompetitive on all but the faster circuits where top speed often counted for more than acceleration. The 80° Honda V6 engine however was smaller and had a lower centre of gravity than its BMW counterpart, so it was ideal for the low-down chassis layout (Murray had stated in an interview during 1986 about the lowline concept that it would work much better with a V6 engine). With this in mind, Murray's original design for the BT55 was revised and McLaren went ahead with his plan.The lowline concept was not completely new to McLaren however. Murray had joined the team in 1987 where he played a small hand in helping Nichols refine his design for the 1988 McLaren MP4/4's predecessor, the McLaren MP4/3, which was completely different aerodynamically to the bulbous looking McLaren MP4/2C it had replaced. With the 90° TAG-Porsche V6 at their disposal, and new rules reducing fuel tank size from 220 litres to 195 litres, McLaren proved that the lowline concept did work, with redesigned side pods also getting the treatment (only the nose section remained as a visual reminder of the McLaren MP4/2C). The improved aerodynamics helping the Prost and Stefan Johansson to be closer to the more powerful Honda powered cars than they would have been with the older MP4/2 design, although the team was hampered by unreliability which had crept into the TAG engines. The team was able to build on this and, with the smaller Honda V6, and a further reduction in fuel tank size from 195 to 150 litres, the sleek looking 1988 McLaren MP4/4 was produced and first appeared early in 1988.
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Hamilton to leave McLaren

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Motor Racing | Formula One : McLaren says Hamilton to leave, Perez to join

Motor Racing | Formula One : McLaren says Hamilton to leave, Perez to join


LONDON - Former Formula One champion Lewis Hamilton will leave McLaren and will be replaced by Sauber's Mexican driver Sergio Perez at the start of the 2013 season, McLaren said in a statement Friday.Hamilton is reportedly to move to Mercedes but there was no immediate confirmation.
"It's entirely appropriate that I should take this opportunity to pass on our thanks to Lewis. He wrote a huge chapter of his life and career with us, and was, and always will be, a fine member of an exclusive club: the McLaren world champions' club," team principal Martin Whitmarsh said.

JENSON WINS HIS 50TH GP WITH McLAREN

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JENSON BUTTON WINS HIS 50TH GP WITH McLAREN
Spa-Francorchamps, Sunday September 2
JENSON WINS HIS 50TH GP WITH McLAREN

"Jenson was masterful today”
179th victory for McLaren 

75th victory for McLaren, Mobil 1, Mercedes-Benz and Enkei

50th race for Jenson with Vodafone McLaren Mercedes

31st victory for Vodafone McLaren Mercedes

14th victory for Jenson

4th victory of the season for Vodafone McLaren Mercedes

2nd successive victory for Vodafone McLaren Mercedes

JENSON BUTTON

MP4-27A-02

JENSON WINS HIS 50TH GP WITH McLAREN at Belgian GP

Started 1st
Finished 1st
Fastest lap 1m54.293s (+1.471s, 10th)
Pitstops One: lap 20 (2.49s) [Opt-Pri]
Points 101 (6th)

"I’m sorry to all the fans if it wasn’t very exciting at the front!

"However, winning a grand prix is never easy: you’ve always got to look after the tyres and keep an eye on the gap behind. Today’s race was particularly tricky to read, in fact, because lots of cars were on different strategies so you never knew exactly where you stood.

"Turn One looked pretty crazy – in my mirrors, I could see cars all over the place. For me, it was all pretty straightforward though. Having said that, without having been able to gather long-run testing data from Friday, it initially looked like it was going to be a hard race to call. In fact, as things panned out, it was the opposite.

"It was unusual to be able to run a one-stop strategy. We got to lap 12 and the team asked me how the car was feeling; I told them that the balance was getting better and better, so we were able to get to lap 20 before pitting.

"We need to score big points in both world championships – and today was exactly what we required. I’m a massive team-player, and I fight for the team; I want us to win both world championships and, until I can’t mathematically fight for the drivers’ world championship, I won’t give up on it. I think I showed that today.”
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