Nando wrote:I think Mclaren are sand bagging to be honest.
Comparing their quali sim laptime to their race run laptime it looks like they're on a 1st stint (race start) fuel load. But the Red Bull was arguably more impressive, with similar dropoff and 3-4 tenths quicker. The pace advantage is way too small to be down to fuel IMO. (Mind you this in the context of fp2 - McLaren didn't run their upgrades in FP2)
aero expert 807 wrote:Has the whole track been repaved? I thought only a small section was.
Dengner 1 all the way up to the chicane.
richard_leeds wrote:Depending on traffic and climatic conditions, the optimum roughness is roughly 1 year, then the roughness trails off over 10- 20 years.
The asphalt, to my understanding, was laid down last year. So the texture should be close to optimum by now, no?
godlameroso wrote:perhaps then excess downforce doesnt affect tire wear as much with a smooth surface.
I think excess downforce is a boon on smooth surfaces. Remember Canada 2010? The asphalt was too smooth - cars were graining all over the place. Teams were adding downforce to counter.
I think OPP will be the default strategy, and if there's a safety car it will lock in OPP as the strategy (for those who, by the safety car, are able to finish using OPP - ie they haven't gone OPO) however I think a 3-stopper with OOPP or OOOP might be on the cards too. I think that could be quite fast, competitive with the 2 stop, but you lose track position which isn't easy to overtake back around Suzuka. But if a safety car pops up just as the 3 stoppers are making their final stop, or too early for the 2nd stop of the 2 stoppers - then the fresh tyres would be mega.