bananapeel23 wrote: ↑10 Jan 2025, 16:54
Seanspeed wrote: ↑10 Jan 2025, 02:24
I feel like you're proving my entire point. You're remembering the outliers in a small handful of races where Ferrari had fantastic race pace/tire wear, while ignoring that Mclaren had superior race pace/tire wear for like 80% of the season in comparison.
The point here is that when allowed to cruise at the ”natural” pace of the car (i.e. in the optimal temperature window), Ferrari was much kinder on their tyres than McLaren and could manage longer stints with respectable pace.
Again, that's just selective memory.
So when Ferrari were falling off in pace, it was because of 'natural pace' of the car, and not because the tires were falling off? The Ferrari could achieve very good tire preservation, but it could only be achieved if they did everything right, and in particular, really took it easy on the tires in the early stages of a stint. Basically, they had a high peak for tire life if everything went well, but in this era, that's clearly very hard to do consistently, and Ferrari definitely failed plenty.
While I'd say with Mclaren, there was a wider working window for them to keep their tires working well and in decent shape. It was a better overall situation in terms of tire usage, even if they, like everybody on the grid, didn't always get it right, either.