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How Caterham’s success is rooted in continual evolution

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From Benetton to Gucci: Is Briatore closing the circle at Enstone?

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MotoGP proposes four safety solutions following Barcelona drama

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FIA scraps F1 straight mode in Monaco GP – here's what that means for the pecking order

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You Ask The Questions: Valtteri Bottas

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WRC Rally Japan: Evans leads with Solberg delayed by deer, Katsuta frustrated

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Verstappen and Sainz urge FIA “to be tough”, but F1 manufacturers must look in the mirror

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McLaren: No plans to race shark fin cover

McLaren are not planning to race the new shark fin engine cover tested ahead of the German Prix for the moment, as it did not prove beneficial when ran

The Mercedes-powered team tested the engine cover at Hockenheim but ruled out racing it despite many of their rivals having already adopted it.

McLaren's F1 CEO Martin Whitmarsh said the team's priorities are now focused elsewhere.

"Its intended aim was to improve the car's sensitivity during yaw, but we found that some of the advantage it brought to that area was being offset elsewhere," said Whitmarsh of the engine cover.

"As you can clearly see, it is a large structure and one that is particularly sensitive to crosswinds.

"We felt that our car already delivers sufficiently in yaw and that continuing to experiment with the dorsal fin might not bring us the sufficient performance benefit we'd require to make it worthwhile.

"As such, it is not something we are giving priority to at the moment."

Whitmarsh said, however, that McLaren continue with their development push and that new components will appear at the next race in Valencia.

"We are undertaking two 50km shakedown tests ahead of Valencia," he said. "We're also continually developing new parts for the car.

"As our simulation and development departments continue to produce new parts, we'll take a view as to whether they'll be raced. We won't disclose what they are but I'm sure you'll see some new components appear during Friday testing at the next race."

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