McLaren’s carbon fibre heritage and DNA: From MP4/1 Formula 1 car to W1 Ultimate supercar
Original 16834 4 Mclaren W1
With over 60 years as a leader in innovative technologies developed in Formula 1, McLaren is advantageously placed to deliver breakthrough automotive technologies that set the standards in lightweight supercar engineering.
And it is with carbon fibre that McLaren’s
innovative capabilities are strongly represented. Lightweight, strong, and
rigid, McLaren is now approaching half a century as a world leader in this
highly technical area of materials science and continues to push the boundaries
of what is possible.
Carbon fibre plays an essential part in
delivering supercars with the best possible combination of attributes on road
and track. Every single McLaren production car since the first, the McLaren F1,
has been based on a chassis made from this composite material. The light weight
and rigidity of the material is key to delivering benchmark performance and
thrilling dynamics, but also class leading ride quality and the added benefits
of efficiency. Its strength provides safety, assurance and durability. It is the
perfect material upon which to create a platform for a supercar with incredible
packaging solutions, enabling designers to create cars with incredible
aesthetics and aerodynamic efficiency.
It is a technology firmly rooted in
McLaren’s Formula 1 heritage, and is a core part of the McLaren DNA:
MP4/1 (1981)
The MP4/1 revolutionised Formula 1 as the
first race car to use a full carbon fibre monocoque chassis. Its lightweight,
rigid structure significantly improved both safety and performance. Designed by
John Barnard, this pioneering chassis led to widespread carbon fibre adoption
in motorsport, changing F1 car design forever.
The introduction of carbon fibre chassis
cars in the sport began a modernised era in Formula 1. The superiority of
carbon fibre from a safety perspective was demonstrated in spectacular fashion
at the 1981 Italian Grand Prix. McLaren driver John Watson sustained and walked
away from a huge 140mph accident unharmed. It was a major moment in convincing
the wider Formula 1 paddock that carbon fibre chassis technology was the future
of safety in Formula 1. The performance potential of a carbon chassis was made clear
only three races later, as Watson won that year’s British Grand Prix by more
than 40 seconds.
McLaren F1 (1993)
Of the many groundbreaking design features
of the McLaren F1, the utilisation of a carbon fibre monocoque chassis and a
full carbon fibre body, emphasizing minimal weight and maximum structural
rigidity, were among the most important. Pioneering the use of carbon fibre in
road cars, the F1 boasted unmatched performance because of its light weight of
only 1,140kg and its immense power of 627PS from its 6.1-litre V12 engine. The
carbon fibre monocoque – engineered using at the time cutting-edge computer aided
design and analysis - allowed the F1 to achieve a significant power-to-weight
ratio previously unheard of in road cars, becoming an icon of supercar
engineering.
It was the platform upon which not only the
world’s fastest road car was built, achieving a top speed of 240.1mph at the
Ehra-Lessien proving ground in Germany, but it also embarked carbon fibre
technology on a complete circle of track, to road, and back again, after the F1
GTR won the 1995 Le Mans 24 Hours.
McLaren MP4-12C
McLaren 12C (2011)
The McLaren 12C, the first road car to be
produced by McLaren Automotive at the state-of-the-art McLaren Production
Centre, introduced the MonoCell; a single-piece carbon fibre tub that provided
unprecedented stiffness and lightness in a road car at the time. The
development of the chassis took the McLaren carbon fibre story into the 21st
century. MonoCell was the backbone of the world’s first truly mass-produced
full carbon fibre tub supercar range, delivering the benefits of this type of
chassis construction on a scale never seen in the automotive industry before.
The MonoCell was one of several
revolutionary new technologies introduced by 12C to the supercar segment, while
also being one of the core elements in the creation of McLaren's modern
supercar DNA, laying the foundations for the future. Its advantages over the
Aluminium designs still popular at the time ranged not only from incredible
light weight of only 75kg for the tub itself, but tortional rigidity so great
that the Spider variant of the 12C required no additional chassis strengthening
– a no compromise solution true of all McLaren spiders created to date.
McLaren P1 (2013)
Only two years on from launching the 12C,
McLaren would once again revolutionise carbon fibre supercar technology with
the launch of the McLaren P1™ in 2013. This second instalment in McLaren’s ‘1’
car linage took another step forward from its groundbreaking forebearer, the
McLaren F1, through the use of a full carbon fibre body structure incorporating
not only the roof and lower structures, roof snorkel, engine air intake cavity,
but also the battery and power electronics housing that were integral to the P1’s
high performance hybrid powertrain, in a structure known as MonoCage.
The entire structure weighed only 90kgs – a
masterpiece in supercar engineering and packaging that proved to the world that
electrification needn’t mean compromises on overall vehicle weight and can play
an integral role in delivering performance in a true lightweight Ultimate
supercar.
McLaren 750S Coupé
McLaren 720S (2017)
The 720S introduced the Monocage II carbon
fibre structure that is still employed by the McLaren 750S today, further
enhancing rigidity and reducing weight compared to its predecessor, the
MonoCell. The lightweight structure comprises the entire passenger cell,
combining a carbon fibre tub with an upper structure in carbon fibre to further
enhance lightweight attributes. This significant step forward in carbon
monocoque technology in series production supercars delivered not only
multiple-award winning performance and dynamics, but vastly improved
ergonomics, visibility and design.
The incredibly slim roof pillars of the
Monocage II result in outstanding visibility through the windscreen, and
combined with B-pillars that are positioned rearwards on the cab-forward
cockpit, the Monocage II contributes to a sensation of exceptional space. The
sills of the Monocage II drop down towards where the occupants’ feet are, for
easier ingress and egress. The dramatic double-skinned dihedral doors hinge
forwards and upwards as they open, taking a portion of roof in the process. The
carbon cell had delivered a supercar as easy to get in and out of as easy is it
was to extract maximum performance from.
And like the advantages introduced by
MonoCell, the Spider version of 720S and subsequently 750S features a bespoke
upper rear structure in carbon fibre, without the need for additional
strengthening or reinforcement to go with it, ensuring thrilling dynamics and
minimal weight increase.
The McLaren Composites Technology Centre
opens (2018)
The opening of the McLaren Composites
Technology Centre (MCTC) in Sheffield, UK, in 2018 marked a £50m investment in
the first standalone McLaren production facility outside Woking. This
world-class facility, formed through a partnership between McLaren Automotive,
the University of Sheffield’s AMRC and Sheffield City Council, aims to be a
centre-of-excellence in both composites engineering and research, but also in
production of new-generation carbon fibre tubs that can directly integrate with
future powertrain technologies.
The first production carbon fibre parts to
be manufactured at MCTC would be for the incredible, ultra-lightweight McLaren
765LT, the car’s active rear wing, rear bumper and front floor designed,
engineered and manufactured at the centre.
McLaren Artura (2021)
The McLaren Artura introduced the McLaren
Carbon Lightweight Architecture (MCLA), designed specifically to integrate a
new generation of high-performance hybrid powertrains. Lighter and stronger
than previous chassis, the MCLA supports the Artura's hybrid V6 powertrain,
while continuing to optimise and develop further the structural advantages of
using a carbon fibre monocoque. Manufactured at McLaren’s first ever major
facility outside of its Woking HQ, the MCLA is made at the McLaren Composites
Technology Centre in Sheffield. The MCLA marks a revolutionary moment in carbon
fibre monocoque technology, enhancing not only the lightweight and rigidity
benefits previously developed into the MonoCell and MonoCage II structures, but
incorporating a safety cell for the battery of the hybrid system used by the
Artura and integrating further crash and load-bearing functionality into the
tub.
McLaren’s revolutionary technologies also
allowed the Artura’s MCLA carbon fibre monocoque to be productionised in
volumes never before achievable. And with the launch of the Artura Spider,
McLaren continues its lightweight spider DNA with no further strengthening or
reinforcement for the chassis of the Artura Spider required over its coupe
variant – McLaren’s first convertible high performance hybrid supercar
delivered without compromise.
McLaren W1 (2024)
The McLaren W1 continues McLaren’s
lightweight carbon fibre DNA evolution with the arrival of the Aerocell, our
most radical and technologically advanced carbon fibre tub ever designed for a
road car. Constructed using pre-preg carbon fibre, this technology – as used on
the hyper exclusive, track-only Solus GT – uses composite that is
pre-impregnated with a resin system that simplifies the curing process.
Pressure treatment is then applied in the mould, which gives the Aerocell
higher structural strength than comparable tubs.
Pound for pound, it results in a lighter
tub that negates the need for additional bodywork in places on the car’s
exterior – a lightweight benefit explored in the design of the W1. The Aerocell
has also been designed as a key element of the W1’s extreme aerodynamic package
making use of true ground effect, achieved by raising the floor of the
monocoque by 65mm, which has lifted the footwell position and rising to 80mm
towards the front of the Aerocell. At the same time, to reduce the length of
the Aerocell - and of the overall vehicle - the decision was taken to fix the
seat position and incorporate seating into the monocoque. Reducing the
wheelbase by almost 70mm, this also has the added benefit of saving further
weight.
The McLaren W1 also sees the introduction
of McLaren’s next-generation carbon fibre technology; ART Carbon. Made possible
via the development of McLaren’s breakthrough Automated Rapid Tape (ART) ‘high
rate’ deposition manufacturing technique, ART Carbon unlocks new possibilities
for engineers. Lighter and stiffer, produced with fewer waste materials, and
enabling the rapid creation of optimised carbon fibre parts with specialised
properties, the active front wing of the McLaren W1 debuts this new technology.
Source: PR



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