No they won't; if there's variation. That is why I mentioned choice. My explanation was vague, of course it was, I was thinking on the spot.myurr wrote:But if there is a hard tyre that allows you to push and will do the whole race then everyone will do the exact same strategy - they'll all use that one tyre.
"driving to a target time"I agree that it would be better to have a tyre that can be leant on without falling apart, but Hamilton showed how it could be done with the current hard tyre in the last race. He was able to overtake many cars and get the tyres to last. In the final stint he was driving to a target time and managed almost half the race distance on a single set of tyres.
That's my problem. This isn't real racing in my view. There needs to be a mix, not everyone racing to a delta.
Really? Try reading Horner's recent comments.It is possible but the teams have to get the setup right. By the end of this year the teams will be on top of the setup and will all be doing similar strategies at every race again.
So what if there is another winner in Monaco? In qualifying a difference of just 0.1% in performance is usually enough to be the difference between a top 5 place and not getting into the top 10. The field is so incredibly close this year because of rule stability and the FIA cracking down on some of the creative ways teams were bending the rules. When things are that close the it's obvious that the pecking order will change on a race by race basis.zyphro wrote:"Artificial racing would be to give the slow guys an advantage over the fast guys and that's not what is happening here."
No, the results are solely based on who gets the tyre working. If you can't see that it's time to take your rose tinted glasses off. I bet you we will have another different winner in Monaco.
"The field is so incredibly close this year because of rule stability and the FIA cracking down on some of the creative ways teams were bending the rules."
Whilst that is true, how can you deny tyres are not the most important factor? Tyres are the reason we are getting freak results. Williams almost lapped the previous race winner Vettel, O'rly?
Nope, it's being won by those that get the correct setup done over the weekend. If you get it wrong, well race over. The narrow margin for performance of these tyres makes it all the more harder for teams to figure out how the pesky tyres work.The races are being won by the driver in a good car who drives a great race AND who gets the tyres working.