Why?? This is a good place to learn about the new engines. Try different engine and ERS maps etc. And you can still get as much aero data as you would at a straight line test. Perhaps they wont get that much cleverer on the tires and set up etc. but the test is still valuable IMO.SectorOne wrote:And the relevance of going to Jerez baffles me once again.
To get some mileage on the engines in vaguely representative conditions.SectorOne wrote:And the relevance of going to Jerez baffles me once again.
SectorOne wrote:And the relevance of going to Jerez baffles me once again.
yes, that's why i think lotus won't be too bad off by not participating in the test.Jonnycraig wrote:............. in vaguely representative conditions.SectorOne wrote:And the relevance of going to Jerez baffles me once again.
I guess some track time is better than no track time. However, I'm also baffled why they didn't switch to warmer tracks once they were built? After all modern communications mean distance is less of a problem.SectorOne wrote:And the relevance of going to Jerez baffles me once again.
I dont understand... does Jerez or Bahrain have a sprinkler system ?As a result, changes to F1's Sporting Regulations mean one of this year's pre-season test days will be devoted to wet-weather tyre testing
You can learn about the engines and maps in any of the other thousand tracks around the world though.Holm86 wrote:
Why?? This is a good place to learn about the new engines. Try different engine and ERS maps etc. And you can still get as much aero data as you would at a straight line test. Perhaps they wont get that much cleverer on the tires and set up etc. but the test is still valuable IMO.
Abu Dhabi has talked about it but i think right now only Paul Ricard has it.Blackout wrote:What about this?I dont understand... does Jerez or Bahrain have a sprinkler system ?As a result, changes to F1's Sporting Regulations mean one of this year's pre-season test days will be devoted to wet-weather tyre testing
where has that come from? I'm not sure the teams would agree to that because they will lose a full day for themselves?Blackout wrote:What about this?I dont understand... does Jerez or Bahrain have a sprinkler system ?As a result, changes to F1's Sporting Regulations mean one of this year's pre-season test days will be devoted to wet-weather tyre testing
disappointing there not live. for at least the first day. There will be some much to talk about...Holm86 wrote:Sky Sports Jerez test covering : http://www1.skysports.com/f1/news/22058 ... erez-plans
I heard that ted kravitz confirmed the Bahrain 2nd and 3rd test will be live broadcast-ed on Sky.astracrazy wrote:where has that come from? I'm not sure the teams would agree to that because they will lose a full day for themselves?Blackout wrote:What about this?I dont understand... does Jerez or Bahrain have a sprinkler system ?As a result, changes to F1's Sporting Regulations mean one of this year's pre-season test days will be devoted to wet-weather tyre testing
disappointing there not live. for at least the first day. There will be some much to talk about...Holm86 wrote:Sky Sports Jerez test covering : http://www1.skysports.com/f1/news/22058 ... erez-plans
Autosport http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/form ... 1--f1.html + AMuSastracrazy wrote:where has that come from? I'm not sure the teams would agree to that because they will lose a full day for themselves?Blackout wrote:What about this?I dont understand... does Jerez or Bahrain have a sprinkler system ?As a result, changes to F1's Sporting Regulations mean one of this year's pre-season test days will be devoted to wet-weather tyre testing
I'm also curious how that will work.The new rules will mean one of the 12 days of official pre-season testing will have to be dedicated exclusively to wet tyre testing.
Teams must also dedicate one of their eight days of in-season testing exclusively to tyre testing with Pirelli.
"This means that during each of the eight days of in-season testing, at least one team - and up to a maximum of two - will be concentrating on tyre testing along with Pirelli's engineers," the Pirelli statement said.
i could help Pirelli i had whole garden hose set. Brand new! Anyone else?turbof1 wrote:Temperatures are relatively soft now at Bahrain, 17-20°C, with a humidity of 88%. The track could easily stay wet provided they continually wet the racing line. You can't do that with a sprinkler truck; you spray it wet, then the truck has to go off the track for the f1 cars to run. 11 cars will cut a dry racing line within 2 laps.
They'll have to install temporary sprinkler systems, or hope for a rainy day at either Jerez or Bahrain.