No bonus points for the obvious, but what i want to know is:
Where we talk about the 'Grip' of an F1 tyre (p zero or any type of F1 tyre) we always talk about the tyre being warm and in some cases 'sticky'
As the tyre reaches its optimal operating temperature does this improve grip by either allow the tyre to 'tread' into the surface, or does the chemical that we call 'rubber' actually give an adhesive quality? Or are we looking at both?
The reason i ask this question is because of the very unique surface of the Indianapolis motor speedway, i just wonder if the added groves given by the brick layout would in some way allow the tyre to step into the void between the brick and improve adhesion?
I know the obvious comparison would be to compare the void between the bricks to tread cut into tyres, my instincts would tell me a bricks surface might be better under braking, but awful in corners. So what makes a tyre stick? and dont say Peter Sauber