So Pirelli changed tread thickness by 0.4mm (I think I read) 0.4mm! Not 4mm 0.4mm! Thats nothing!? How can something so small make such a huge difference!
And how can Merc not manage a tyre so close to today's tyres?
He didn't then drive up next to Lance Stroll and hit him, that's something.
I think first driver to have back to back Barcelona wins as well.Restomaniac wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 18:36The Hamilton record setting machine rolls on.
His latest one is winning races from pole positions.
You are correct, I had it wrong. It is one kilo per set, not per tyre. Fact stays, small things can have a big impact as we saw today. Two teams highlighted sever blistering and two teams clearly had an tyre life and performance advantage today. One much much more than the other though.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 21:51If find it hard to believe 0.4mm is equal to a kilo. That would mean the tyres would weight 100kg+ each, which of course they dont. Unless the tyres are only 5mm thick?
Before the VSC Max was 8,5 second behind Bottas, after the VSC 12 seconds. And he was on the tail of Stroll (not allowed to overtake under VSC) how is that possible? Why was Stroll not keeping his delta. If the Ferrari pitstop for Vettel would have been faultless Vettel would have been back on the track before Verstappen (Stroll was smack death in front of him). Now (with 2 seconds lost during the pitstop due to the right rear wheel not getting on) with Vettel right behind him Max fully expected Stroll to accelerate to and through the chicane, just like when starting any qualy lap. He expected Vettel to be all over him so had nothing to spare there. Why didn’t Stroll accelerate. Just a misjudgement by Max, but I understand why he was so close to Stroll. Otherwise a great race by Max.
I can imagine that it impacts thermal management of the tire. Rubber, even carbon-filled, is a quite good thermal insulator. 0.4 mm could make it a lot harder to transfer heat away from the friction surface. Not sure whether it could impact stiffness, but it does look like 0.4 millimeter is significant to the overall thread thickness.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 21:37So Pirelli changed tread thickness by 0.4mm (I think I read) 0.4mm! Not 4mm 0.4mm! Thats nothing!? How can something so small make such a huge difference!
I imagine nerfing a car in the back side instead of accelerating away on an empty track may cost you 3.5 secsSieper wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 22:08Before the VSC Max was 8,5 second behind Bottas, after the VSC 12 seconds. And he was on the tail of Stroll (not allowed to overtake under VSC) how is that possible? Why was Stroll not keeping his delta. If the Ferrari pitstop for Vettel would have been faultless Vettel would have been back on the track before Verstappen (Stroll was smack death in front of him). Now (with 2 seconds lost during the pitstop due to the right rear wheel not getting on) with Vettel right behind him Max fully expected Stroll to accelerate to and through the chicane, just like when starting any qualy lap. He expected Vettel to be all over him so had nothing to spare there. Why didn’t Stroll accelerate. Just a misjudgement by Max, but I understand why he was so close to Stroll. Otherwise a great race by Max.
If a kilo can cause such wild fluctuation in performance, then surely we would need to ban full tanks of fuel, because an F1 car can weigh almost 100 Kg less between race start and end as fuel is burnt.Mamba wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 22:05You are correct, I had it wrong. It is one kilo per set, not per tyre. Fact stays, small things can have a big impact as we saw today. Two teams highlighted sever blistering and two teams clearly had an tyre life and performance advantage today. One much much more than the other though.
Then again, if like what you say, 0.4mm hardly makes a difference, why even bring them here?GrandAxe wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 22:26If a kilo can cause such wild fluctuation in performance, then surely we would need to ban full tanks of fuel, because an F1 car can weigh almost 100 Kg less between race start and end as fuel is burnt.Mamba wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 22:05You are correct, I had it wrong. It is one kilo per set, not per tyre. Fact stays, small things can have a big impact as we saw today. Two teams highlighted sever blistering and two teams clearly had an tyre life and performance advantage today. One much much more than the other though.
If shaving off 0.4mm from the tyre surface (without changing the compound) can result in "cheating", then by God, we must ban F1 tyres from ever wearing and losing any multiple of 04.mm from their surfaces. Going by the logic of your argument; as it is, tyres can currently wear down to the canvas - this has to be very wrong, it has to be "cheating".
Lets lay this thing to rest.