beelsebob wrote:ESPImperium wrote:That grey tyre is still too close to the white, however they could be diffrent at speed.
Id have prefered Pirelli to have had 3 slick compounds and 2 wet compopunds.
Hard = Red
Medium = Yellow
Soft = White
Inters = Green
Wets = Blue
With each of the slick sets having a 0.6 to 0.8 of a second step wetween them, and a 7 to 10 lap duarability step between them all as well. Make the strategy guys think.
Your version of "they could all be different" is "we could get rid of the super softs and then we wouldn't have a problem"... What surprises me though is that they don't use red, orange, yellow, white, for the various dry tyres.
My version is get rid of the hards and then give each driver 5 soft, 4 medium and 4 hards for the weekend and see if they can make them last. With all entries having 1 set of softs set aside for a 5 minuite 1 run only Q3 where the Q3 guys have to start on that set in the race. Drivers that dont get into Q3 then have a fresh set to use in the race and gain an advantage.
Strategy gys would go absoutly mental at options, is it quicker to Q3 or not to Q3. Also drivers wouldnt be able to use a set of softs in Q1 as well, lets get the teams using every set like its their last. With my simulation ive found that 3 sets, where every set has to be used at the weekend, it will give each driver arround 875km of running every weekend. Plenty in reserve as drivers last year were doing 750km to 800km a weekend.
Also teams who put a FP1 driver in one of their cars then get a set of Softs given to that driver free, outside their allocation, for a little carrot and stick action.
3 stops is my target, only Spa is a 2 stopper, but in races tires will wear out, however the undercut is the ever present danger, do you go early and try and gain an extra advantage or wait it out and get that posistion back in the last few laps when your opponent has no useable rubber left?