The 2-compound rule was brought in to make the teams run tyres rather than them being taken to races, not used and thrown away. When Bridgestone were bringing "prime" and "option" tyres, the teams would just run the better tyre which meant Bridgestone were making tyres that wouldn't be used. So they forced the teams to use both specifications.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑26 May 2024, 11:46My ubderstanding is there were no ”soft” or ”hard” tyres. Michelin and Bridgestone were in a development war, and had a huge range of tyres they could bring to any weekend.
Essentially they would have a race tyre and a quali tyre, because they didn’t need a soft and hard because the tyres were so good.
The ”run 2 compounds” rule was made to mandate pit stops, while pit stops were unavoidable in 2006 anyway due to the fact that the cars couldn’t complete a race without refueling.
Modern F1 tyres intentionally suck to make tyre changes strategic. That wasn’t an issue in 2006 when they had refueling, thus the suppliers were allowed to develop incredible tyres.
can i ask one more quastion? in 2006 again, there was a graphic shows how many liter fuel they put to the car during pit-stop. can we say those numbers are 100% correct?bananapeel23 wrote: ↑26 May 2024, 11:46My ubderstanding is there were no ”soft” or ”hard” tyres. Michelin and Bridgestone were in a development war, and had a huge range of tyres they could bring to any weekend.
Essentially they would have a race tyre and a quali tyre, because they didn’t need a soft and hard because the tyres were so good.
The ”run 2 compounds” rule was made to mandate pit stops, while pit stops were unavoidable in 2006 anyway due to the fact that the cars couldn’t complete a race without refueling.
Modern F1 tyres intentionally suck to make tyre changes strategic. That wasn’t an issue in 2006 when they had refueling, thus the suppliers were allowed to develop incredible tyres.
I'm not super familiar with the refueling era, so take literally everything I say and have said with a handful of salt.Teflonso wrote: ↑27 May 2024, 13:01can i ask one more quastion? in 2006 again, there was a graphic shows how many liter fuel they put to the car during pit-stop. can we say those numbers are 100% correct?bananapeel23 wrote: ↑26 May 2024, 11:46My ubderstanding is there were no ”soft” or ”hard” tyres. Michelin and Bridgestone were in a development war, and had a huge range of tyres they could bring to any weekend.
Essentially they would have a race tyre and a quali tyre, because they didn’t need a soft and hard because the tyres were so good.
The ”run 2 compounds” rule was made to mandate pit stops, while pit stops were unavoidable in 2006 anyway due to the fact that the cars couldn’t complete a race without refueling.
Modern F1 tyres intentionally suck to make tyre changes strategic. That wasn’t an issue in 2006 when they had refueling, thus the suppliers were allowed to develop incredible tyres.
I’m pretty sure this was a tv graphic which estimated the fuel given (a) the rate at which fuel could flow into the car was known and according to a spec piece of equipment (the refuelling rigs were supplied by the FIA) (b) the stopwatch on how long the car was stationary/fuel hose attached. In principle it (b) was correct, then these would be accurate. However, I don’t think the timing was an exact science (ie based on a human input not a sensor on the rig) so was not always perfect. Good enough for tv graphics of the era though.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑27 May 2024, 15:37I'm not super familiar with the refueling era, so take literally everything I say and have said with a handful of salt.Teflonso wrote: ↑27 May 2024, 13:01can i ask one more quastion? in 2006 again, there was a graphic shows how many liter fuel they put to the car during pit-stop. can we say those numbers are 100% correct?bananapeel23 wrote: ↑26 May 2024, 11:46My ubderstanding is there were no ”soft” or ”hard” tyres. Michelin and Bridgestone were in a development war, and had a huge range of tyres they could bring to any weekend.
Essentially they would have a race tyre and a quali tyre, because they didn’t need a soft and hard because the tyres were so good.
The ”run 2 compounds” rule was made to mandate pit stops, while pit stops were unavoidable in 2006 anyway due to the fact that the cars couldn’t complete a race without refueling.
Modern F1 tyres intentionally suck to make tyre changes strategic. That wasn’t an issue in 2006 when they had refueling, thus the suppliers were allowed to develop incredible tyres.
But my understanding is that the refueling estimates are almost dead on when it comes to how much fuel they just took on, since the amount of fuel you could pump per second was regulated, or at least indirectly limited to some amount which everyone reached. (except for 1994, when Benetton removed a filter which meant they could pump ~10% faster and also set Jos Verstappen on fire)
When it comes to total fuel load, however, it was usually an unknown, since you started with the same amount of fuel that you had in quali. One driver might start with 100kg of fuel, another might start with 10kg. It's very hard to know exactly how much fuel the drivers are carrying, even if you know almost exactly how much they refueled during any given pit stop, since they could be doing a bunch of lift an coast and the different engines burned different amounts of fuel. Total fuel estimates were probably in the right ballpark though.
I can explain the whole thing to you. As you know, it was a tire war between Michelin and Bridgestone. Each manufacturer could tailor the tires for each car and team and new compounds and constructions were brought to almost every race (in most cases, however, there were "only" two different constructions). Some time in advance of each race teams were given a selection of tyre specifications from which to choose. From this choice they would select two specifications to take to the event, each of which would be tried on Friday. The rules stipulated that from Saturday onwards only one tyre specification could be used. So Friday would typically be spent trying to get the necessary durability from the tyre that was faster over one lap. The combination of having to make the tyre selection in advance with the very narrow track temperature window of these tyres meant that both companies tended to formulate tyres for specific track temperature ranges. The tires were divided into prime (hard) and option (soft) and there were usually two compounds of each available, in some cases, however, the manufacturers even brought three different Prime and Option compounds to the track so that there were sometimes six or even seven different tyre conpounds the teams can choose from.
There were hard and soft tyres called "Prime" and "Option". Qualifying tyres were a thing of the 80's tire war. In the 00's there were no Qualifying-Tyres as you had to use the same tires in Quali and Race.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑26 May 2024, 11:46My ubderstanding is there were no ”soft” or ”hard” tyres. Michelin and Bridgestone were in a development war, and had a huge range of tyres they could bring to any weekend.
Essentially they would have a race tyre and a quali tyre, because they didn’t need a soft and hard because the tyres were so good.
The ”run 2 compounds” rule was made to mandate pit stops, while pit stops were unavoidable in 2006 anyway due to the fact that the cars couldn’t complete a race without refueling.
Modern F1 tyres intentionally suck to make tyre changes strategic. That wasn’t an issue in 2006 when they had refueling, thus the suppliers were allowed to develop incredible tyres.