Haven't noticed the Merc, but the Red Bull has proven a stronger rear-limited car than the Lotus or Ferrari.kooleracer wrote:Medium and Soft tyres, These will mean we will have a stronger Lotus and Ferrari. So it will a 4 way battle. And don't know if Nurburgring is front or rear limited but i think this a traction circuit so rear limited. That means Merc and RBR have less advantage. I think Kimi or Alonso to take the win. Vettel 3rd and Merc 4-5.
forget Ferrari and Lotus , they r done with this year's championship. its a straight 2 way fight between mercs and redbull . lets hope mercedes dominates this race and keep championship alive for sometime. post tyregate mercedes looks like best car on the grid (a bit down on race pace) but if temp remains low as predicted , they will take away an easy win against Redbull.rssh wrote:This is a track on which all the cars strong point get nullified over the lap i.e. Macca strong front end (S1) Redbull good traction and balance (S2) Ferrari at par in everything in all sectors (as always FA only). Loved the 2011 race and love the track (I hate Hockenheim new layout). I have to say I am impressed with the post-tyregate Merc and it has shown good wear levels and I expect them to win from Pole. Redbull though has good traction and better braking I expect them to be on the second row.
PS - I will be surprised if Bernie Eccelstone turns up for this GP
They had them ready to go at silverstone. It was only the veto by Lotus and Ferrari that stopped them being used so I can't see any reason why they can't use the tyres that they had ready fro that event. It may mean that it's Hard and mediums, rather than hard and soft...gandharva wrote:Rumors... Seems we already will see kevlar belt tires at Nurburgring. An official announcement is expected during the day.
This seems a bit too quick for me. But never say never...
Be fair, Force India vetoed the tyres as well.bonjon1979 wrote:They had them ready to go at silverstone. It was only the veto by Lotus and Ferrari that stopped them being used so I can't see any reason why they can't use the tyres that they had ready fro that event. It may mean that it's Hard and mediums, rather than hard and soft...gandharva wrote:Rumors... Seems we already will see kevlar belt tires at Nurburgring. An official announcement is expected during the day.
This seems a bit too quick for me. But never say never...
Oh come on.... after the first race of the season it was Lotus's title to loose, then Ferrari's, I expect both the Merc's & Red Bull's to drop away again as some point, it will be dependent on track, tyres & temp. Horses for courses some might say.max_speed wrote:forget Ferrari and Lotus , they r done with this year's championship. its a straight 2 way fight between mercs and redbull . lets hope mercedes dominates this race and keep championship alive for sometime. post tyregate mercedes looks like best car on the grid (a bit down on race pace) but if temp remains low as predicted , they will take away an easy win against Redbull.rssh wrote:This is a track on which all the cars strong point get nullified over the lap i.e. Macca strong front end (S1) Redbull good traction and balance (S2) Ferrari at par in everything in all sectors (as always FA only). Loved the 2011 race and love the track (I hate Hockenheim new layout). I have to say I am impressed with the post-tyregate Merc and it has shown good wear levels and I expect them to win from Pole. Redbull though has good traction and better braking I expect them to be on the second row.
PS - I will be surprised if Bernie Eccelstone turns up for this GP
Couldn't they just recycle old tyres? Metals and rubber, something more?f1316 wrote:You would think a quick fix would be to bring the soft and super soft from last year. If this year's tyres are one step softer, this would be equivalent to the soft and mediums fro 2013 - which is exactly what we were supposed to have.
Do we think Pirelli still keep enough of these old tyres? I'm sure they *had* a stock pile, but what happens to tyres from previous seasons once they are no longer part of the current 'crop', I wonder?