They were called hypersofts and ultrasofts. It's a matter of FIA making that call though.
They were called hypersofts and ultrasofts. It's a matter of FIA making that call though.
Louis Chiron. Look him up.chrisc90 wrote: β26 May 2024, 17:48hallelujah that's over. 2.5-3 hours of my life I wont get back. 77 lap procession with only 2 overtakes by the near 2 slowest drivers on track. Stroll and Bottas.
Congrats to Charles for finally winning his home GP, first man to do it.
Even 4 seconds a lap difference and 50 lap newer tyres cant see a overtake. Really surprising Monaco is still on the calendar when there's old classics which offer much more racing are getting the boot off the calendar.
Checo has had a history of struggling big-time once the Euro season starts as far back as 2021. Red Bull knew this. Perez hasn't had good form at some of these tracks ever.
First driver in F1 history would be accurate. Chiron won in 1931 - before F1 even existed.PlatinumZealot wrote: β26 May 2024, 21:05Louis Chiron. Look him up.chrisc90 wrote: β26 May 2024, 17:48hallelujah that's over. 2.5-3 hours of my life I wont get back. 77 lap procession with only 2 overtakes by the near 2 slowest drivers on track. Stroll and Bottas.
Congrats to Charles for finally winning his home GP, first man to do it.
Even 4 seconds a lap difference and 50 lap newer tyres cant see a overtake. Really surprising Monaco is still on the calendar when there's old classics which offer much more racing are getting the boot off the calendar.
Seems a bit dramatic to say WCC is lost already. We can wait until 60-70% of the season to make those kinds of statements.TeamKoolGreen wrote:Checo has had a history of struggling big-time once the Euro season starts as far back as 2021. Red Bull knew this. Perez hasn't had good form at some of these tracks ever.
The WCC is already lost for Red Bull. There's not a chance that Perez will hang with Piastri or Sainz. Its just a matter of next year. If Red Bull wants to lose the WCC before it even begins yet again.
It is a long season and there are plenty of upgrades to come and for the teams to try themselves at different circuit configurations. But if relative performance were to stay similar to what it is, then if Checo doesn't up his game then Red Bull are going to struggle to get another WCC this year. I think it is right to worry, but also that it isn't yet decided.dialtone wrote: β26 May 2024, 21:49Seems a bit dramatic to say WCC is lost already. We can wait until 60-70% of the season to make those kinds of statements.TeamKoolGreen wrote:Checo has had a history of struggling big-time once the Euro season starts as far back as 2021. Red Bull knew this. Perez hasn't had good form at some of these tracks ever.
The WCC is already lost for Red Bull. There's not a chance that Perez will hang with Piastri or Sainz. Its just a matter of next year. If Red Bull wants to lose the WCC before it even begins yet again.
Even those didn't wear/degrade fast enoughPlatinumZealot wrote: β26 May 2024, 21:02They were called hypersofts and ultrasofts. It's a matter of FIA making that call though.
Ricciardo won Monaco with a totally broken MGU-K. It isn't enough.
Itβs not like normal 1 stop monaco are that exciting anyway. These cars are too big and lack agility, and the tyres burn out too quickly if you tried anyway even here.Seanspeed wrote:There's no way to fix Monaco from a racing perspective. We just have to get used to the fact that overtaking here is outrageously difficult without some luck.
But I dont think F1 as a whole would hurt from having a 'one mandatory pitsop' rule. That's similar enough to what the point of mandating the use of two different compounds in the race is anyways. That comes with the expectation that there will be at least one stop in the race, but obviously we experience the rare situation here where a red flag ruins that at a track where tire wear is super minimal. Mandate at least one stop every race no matter what and it'll change nothing for basically any other race, while ensuring the rare situation like this still gets a bit of strategy intrigue.
I can think of no downsides.
Nah, even with smaller cars overtaking is just close to impossible.dialtone wrote: β26 May 2024, 23:52Itβs not like normal 1 stop monaco are that exciting anyway. These cars are too big and lack agility, and the tyres burn out too quickly if you tried anyway even here.Seanspeed wrote:There's no way to fix Monaco from a racing perspective. We just have to get used to the fact that overtaking here is outrageously difficult without some luck.
But I dont think F1 as a whole would hurt from having a 'one mandatory pitsop' rule. That's similar enough to what the point of mandating the use of two different compounds in the race is anyways. That comes with the expectation that there will be at least one stop in the race, but obviously we experience the rare situation here where a red flag ruins that at a track where tire wear is super minimal. Mandate at least one stop every race no matter what and it'll change nothing for basically any other race, while ensuring the rare situation like this still gets a bit of strategy intrigue.
I can think of no downsides.
Need smaller lighter cars, then it will be fine.
No it wont be fine. Y'all have short memories if you think Monaco was ever an exciting race without rain or safety car shenanigans mixing things up.dialtone wrote: β26 May 2024, 23:52Itβs not like normal 1 stop monaco are that exciting anyway. These cars are too big and lack agility, and the tyres burn out too quickly if you tried anyway even here.Seanspeed wrote:There's no way to fix Monaco from a racing perspective. We just have to get used to the fact that overtaking here is outrageously difficult without some luck.
But I dont think F1 as a whole would hurt from having a 'one mandatory pitsop' rule. That's similar enough to what the point of mandating the use of two different compounds in the race is anyways. That comes with the expectation that there will be at least one stop in the race, but obviously we experience the rare situation here where a red flag ruins that at a track where tire wear is super minimal. Mandate at least one stop every race no matter what and it'll change nothing for basically any other race, while ensuring the rare situation like this still gets a bit of strategy intrigue.
I can think of no downsides.
Need smaller lighter cars, then it will be fine.