F1 testing: McLaren suffers electrical shutdowns at start of test two
McLaren hit fresh trouble on day one of the second pre-season Formula 1 test, after a double electrical shutdown left Stoffel Vandoorne slowest in the morning with seven laps completed


Following frustrations in the opening test when its mileage was dented by a wheel nut failure and a broken exhaust bracket, McLaren had hoped to hit the ground running in the second week.
But the first day got off to a bad start when the MCL33's Renault engine shut down with an electrical failure as Vandoorne returned to the pits following an installation lap.
Shortly afterwards, Vandoorne stopped out on track with the same electrical issue, bringing out the red flags and prompting a lengthy investigation at the team to work out what the problem was.
Vandoorne was able to get running again shortly before the lunch break so the team could complete a system check, but his seven-lap tally is far short of the mileage the team had hoped for.
It is understood that the electrical issue is related to the battery, but it is unclear whether the problem originates from McLaren's or Renault's side.

McLaren also appears to have been forced to make compromises to its rear bodywork in a bid to help cooling in the car, after it faced overheating headaches during the first test.
Scorch marks on the engine cover last week prompted the team to add an extra cooling slot.
As the car emerged on Tuesday, the team had added three extra slots in a bid to help hot air escape, as Giorgio Piola's exclusive photograph (above) shows.
The slots are not ideal for performance, which could mean the team is forced to tweak the design of its engine cover to help increase airflow and cooling before the first race of the season.
Expert view
Gary Anderson, Technical Consultant
McLaren is pushing the limits on cooling. From the picture above we can see it has added an extra three slots to the one that it was forced to cut into the bodywork last week.
There are two brown-ish marks are on both sides of the bodywork so there is something very close to that part of the engine cover - probably the exhausts or turbo - and that is of major concern.
The exhaust temperatures on these cars runs at around 400-800C and are wrapped in heat proof insulation. If the temperature cannot be controlled, anything near them is vulnerable.
To finish first, first you have to finish - so these random reliability problems that McLaren seems to have carried over from the Honda days are of major concern, and now they have no one but themselves to point the finger at.

F1 testing quiz: Test your knowledge with Autosport
Ex-Ferrari F1 design chief Tombazis takes on FIA single-seater role

Latest news
Hamilton's F1 commitment never wavered as Wolff dismissed sounding out rivals
Toto Wolff says Lewis Hamilton’s commitment to Mercedes never wavered despite its early-season struggles, meaning he gave no consideration to sounding out other Formula 1 drivers about a drive.
Could late rule changes to F1 2023 floors aid bigger teams?
The FIA World Motor Sport Council finally pushed through rule changes to address porpoising for the 2023 Formula 1 season, amid suggestions the late alterations will help bigger teams.
Magnussen still 'pinching myself' about Haas F1 comeback
Kevin Magnussen says he has gained a new appreciation for the privilege of being a Formula 1 driver over the course of his 2022 comeback season.
Wolff: Mercedes bounced "from depression to exuberance" in "painful" F1 season
Toto Wolff says the ranging emotions through Mercedes’ Formula 1 season so far has been “painful” at times, bouncing from “depression to exuberance” through its 2022 car struggles.
The inconvenient truth about F1’s ‘American driver’ dream
OPINION: The Formula 1 grid's wait for a new American driver looks set to continue into 2023 as the few remaining places up for grabs - most notably at McLaren - look set to go elsewhere. This is despite the Woking outfit giving tests to IndyCar aces recently, showing that the Stateside single-seater series still has some way to go to being seen as a viable feeder option for F1
How a bad car creates the ultimate engineering challenge
While creating a car that is woefully off the pace is a nightmare scenario for any team, it inadvertently generates the test any engineering department would relish: to turn it into a winner. As Mercedes takes on that challenge in Formula 1 this season, McLaren’s former head of vehicle engineering reveals how the team pulled of the feat in 2009 with Lewis Hamilton
The under-fire F1 driver fighting for his future
Personable, articulate and devoid of the usual racing driver airs and graces, Nicholas Latifi is the last Formula 1 driver you’d expect to receive death threats, but such was the toxic legacy of his part in last year’s explosive season finale. And now, as ALEX KALINAUCKAS explains, he faces a battle to keep his place on the F1 grid…
The strange tyre travails faced by F1’s past heroes
Modern grand prix drivers like to think the tyres they work with are unusually difficult and temperamental. But, says MAURICE HAMILTON, their predecessors faced many of the same challenges – and some even stranger…
The returning fan car revolution that could suit F1
Gordon Murray's Brabham BT46B 'fan car' was Formula 1 engineering at perhaps its most outlandish. Now fan technology has been successfully utilised on the McMurtry Speirling at the Goodwood Festival of Speed, could it be adopted by grand prix racing once again?
Hamilton's first experience of turning silver into gold
The seven-time Formula 1 world champion has been lumbered with a duff car before the 2022 Mercedes. Back in 2009, McLaren’s alchemists transformed the disastrous MP4-24 into a winning car with Lewis Hamilton at the wheel. And now it’s happening again at his current team, but can the rate of progress be matched this year?
Why few could blame Leclerc for following the example of Hamilton’s exit bombshell
OPINION: Ferrari's numerous strategy blunders, as well as some of his own mistakes, have cost Charles Leclerc dearly in the 2022 Formula 1 title battle in the first half of the season. Though he is locked into a deal with Ferrari, few could blame Leclerc if he ultimately wanted to look elsewhere - just as Lewis Hamilton did with McLaren 10 years prior
The other McLaren exile hoping to follow Perez's path to a top F1 seat
After being ditched by McLaren earlier in his F1 career Sergio Perez fought his way back into a seat with a leading team. BEN EDWARDS thinks the same could be happening to another member of the current grid