Slick tyres should reduce the amount of marbles on the track. Which might offer more overtaking opportunities for the brave.
I have not seen any news on tyre compounds for next year, does anyone know if a decision was made on Sept 1?
Domenicali strikes me as a dumb nut if all he sees as a priority for the rules is shortening the GPs distance to less than 300 kms. Instead of getting mediocre short tracks and races he should seek the fault at the excessive drag and downforce. a corner like Eau Rouge provides no challenge in the dry any more because the cars are so messed up.The new alliance of F1's ten teams, FOTA, is set to meet on Thursday in the Monza paddock, Italy's La Gazzetta dello Sport reports.
Among the initial ideas to be discussed, the sports newspaper said, is the possible shortening of Grand Prix from their current 300kms.
"An hour and a half for a race is too long," said Ferrari team boss Stefano Domenicali. "We must aim to reduce the time, because often in the second half nothing happens."
Ferrari President Luca di Montezemolo is to chair the Monza meeting, with Honda team boss Ross Brawn in charge of technical matters.
Also on the agenda is the inauguration of the Formula One Teams Association constitution, with all F1 chiefs due to sign up.
Source: GMM
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I don't think Eau rouge has ever been a real problem in term of grip.WhiteBlue wrote:the thing that makes racing boring is uniformity and predictability. unpredictable elements like rain always make for great racing.
Ogami isn't even listening to my point about Eau Rouge. Undisputably Eau Rouge is one of the greatest corners ever in F1. It has been destroyed by too much downforce. I categorically reject any technical spec that allows drivers to run Eau Rouge flat in the dry.
Bernie is dumbing down the tracks by eliminating the traditional venues. Instead of shortening races they should think how they could get the Nordschleife, the old Hockenheim or Suzuka back on the calendar. Soon we will loose another high speed track with Silverstone. F1 needs variety and challenge of the engineers and not making it easier by sprint races on go cart tracks. with vastly different tracks the pendulum would swing a lot over the season depending on how the teams have compromised for traction, high speed reliability and other factors.
Not only Villeneuve but Zonta also , it was back in 1999 because of a rear suspension failure . Boht crashes were really amazing and both B.A.R. Supertecs were completely destroyedWhiteBlue wrote:I was thinking of Villeneuve crashing the BAR there. That was a proper spec. The downforce of the mid 90ties seems to be much more appropriate with the wider tracks and slick tyres.