According to the drivers and interviews during testing, it seems the tires still have degradation but it's relatively linear, instead of essentially parabolic unless managed by grandma driving, like last season. In other words the tires still wear out and lose performance, but are far less prone to runaway thermal degradation.iotar__ wrote: ↑22 Mar 2017, 13:56- Two stops because only 12 on US? OK. Weren't US close to SS? Not close enough and it was Barcelona I guess. There's probably difference in making harder tyres work too. One team (Sauber? from memory) claimed mediums were useless for them.godlameroso wrote: ↑22 Mar 2017, 13:32Pirelli thinks it'll be a 2 stop race, 56 laps, 12 on US, 20 on SS, 24 on S or SS.
That's assuming no safety cars or red flag accidents. Someone will be vying for the title of number one crashtor, will it be Stroll, or Kyvyat?
- Why them, why not Alonso, Verstappen or Vettel? Menace to society routine again? It would be smart to check who had the most incidents or the worst ones. You'd be surprised how media/crowd created noise differs from reality.
Therefore, lap times stay relatively constant through the stint, as tire wear is offset by the car as it consumes fuel and becomes lighter. This means there is still a crossover point where pitting for new tires will make you faster. This just means finding the right time to make an undercut is harder to judge, not that the strategy is useless.