Point is that casual viewer does not know whether Hypersoft is softer than Ultrasoft, or if Supersoft is softer than Ultrasoft. Those terms are quite vague and non descriptive. Using Hard/Medium/Soft will allow casual viewer to immediately understand if the car should be faster or slower depending on which tire is going on. This probably won't work well as pundits will surely continue to use dual nomenclature, C number along with soft/medium/hard, needlessly complicating things.Sierra117 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2019, 13:58This is exactly what i was talking about was gonna happen. A name for a tyre that is an adjective is far more useful than "3 colours but hey you can check the chart to see the c-compounds!". All that happened was the complexity has increased. Having just 3 colours on race day makes no improvement because the names "soft medium hard" are no longer directly associates with the compounds, they're just relative terms now. It was easier before where the MAXIMUM "inconvenience" present was just checking which 3 of several compounds were available.Sawtooth-spike wrote: ↑19 Feb 2019, 13:50I know the Tyre Compounds are only like this for testing, But am i the only one who is totally lost as to the what the tyre mean. I know They did a chart, but they have made it far harder to understand.
I dont really fancy watching with the Tyre Charts next to the screen.
Idea behind is completely sound. Testing is only problematic because they have all 5 compounts available.