Re: tire wear this season, Mercedes has been very gentle on its tires during the races.Vettel165 wrote: ↑12 Apr 2018, 09:13Which factor should play into Ferraris hands and which to Mercedes this weekend.
Cool weather: Mercedes
Q3 tyres (US): Ferrari
Tyre pressures: dont know them
High tyre wear: Ferrari
Front-limited circuit: Mercedes
Power of the engine (main straight): both are likely equal
A new weather forecast from yr.no (usually a very reliable website) which gets its data from ECMWF weather (used by european meteorologist) model is showing now no rain for FP1, and maybe just a shower for FP2, but nothing big. Hope it stay like this.
Mercedes had a lot of pace left in their Mediums at the end of the race in Bahrain, and James Allison went on record saying that they're near or at the top of the field (thus far) in terms of tire degradation over the course of a race.
Where Mercedes has gotten into tire trouble one time this year was with the SS in Bahrain qualifying. Over a single lap, in very hot conditions, the Mercedes has historically (even before the W09, and certainly last year with the W08) had a tendency to overheat the softest compounds over a single lap.
This overheating of the surface on the softer compounds in hot conditions robs the rear tires of their maximum performance because they're outside the operating window. Getting the tires switched on and keeping them in the window has huge implications for single lap pace. Final sectors can just fall apart.
Thought that was an important distinction to make re: how this season has unfolded thus far.