As far as I have understood (please correct me if I have not correctly understood) this year thinner threaded tyres does not warmup too much for the natural" bending of the tyre belts. Moreover being less tyre mass temperature is lost more quickly.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑25 Jun 2019, 15:39Right so Ferrari boss says https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/ferr ... to/4481646
Alright in this forum we all have seen that Mercedes has gone for a draggier car but way more downforce and is thus way more faster. Even in circuits where we thought ok Ferrari has a more powerful PU it will be quicker because it has straights like Baku and Montreal they will win but turns out that was not the case.
We don't have simulation software. We realized that downforce is king in F1 and you can make a lot more time in the corners than you can being blindingly quick down the straights. This is not Nascar/indy after all.
Yet Ferrari went for that philosophy and now FINALLY a third of the season being over the Ferrari team boss is like yeah ok we need to get more downforce at the expense of top speed.
Someone please explain that to me. How Ferrari could have missed that memo where downforce >> top speed.
Moderators sorry if this is in the wrong thread.
So to reach and keep the working temperature it is needed to put additional energy on the tyre with the aerodynamic load (via tyre sidewall cyclical compression and extension).
I suppose that they did not understand/knew that at the time and so the car was optimised with more shift towards efficiency (in the last years Mercedes was not the faster car in slow corners but was much more efficient), but with this year tyres the additional downforce (specifically on the front tyres) of Mercedes permits them to put the tyre in the correct window more easily and to keep them (maybe they have also exceeded with that since their cars have suffered of blistering in France even with the thinner tyre belt.