Henk wrote:ME4ME wrote:To me it looks like Hamilton has been the most clever. There is no need for Mediums, and thus he only took the mandatory medium prescribed by Pirelli, but will probably never use it. For any tyre to be used in qualifying or the race, they would have taken more sets to test in free practice.
This makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. The disadvantage of not knowing how the Mediums work is bigger than the advantage gained by having 1 extra practice session on the Softs. If there is a scenario where the Mediums are the best strategy he will have to fly blind.
Feel free to explain what makes sense then, in your opinion.
My reasoning is this: They will use the SS's in qualifying this year, and will start the race on them. In previous years this race has been a two-stop. Last year it was a one-stop because of cool conditions (according to Pirelli). It is likely it will be a two-stop this year, because it's unlikely that a one-stop SS-M strategy will last till the end. In my mind a SS-S-S strategy would be quickest. Doing 8-25-25 laps respectively on each set. There is no need to use a slow but durable tyre such as the medium, which will last for 35 laps (last year at least). Thus it makes no sense to bring more medium sets than required by Pirelli. If the medium was a favorable racing tyre, teams would have to invest practice time and thus sets, for them to test the compound. None other than Manor have done that. To me it makes a lot of sense to focus on SS and S tyre compounds, using some sets in practise for setup tuning, and be prepared for Q and R.