Verstappen nor Red Bull will make the same mistake twice. They understand how long the tires will last, and how much they can get out of them. I honestly didn't think Hamilton was much faster than Verstappen in Hungary if at all, on the same tires, now with Honda's spec 4 and the new fuel, plus any chassis developments, the gap will be that much narrower. It may be a two stopper, as this track does wear out the rears. The biggest determinants to strategy will be track position, and safety cars, if it rains during the race, all bets are off.GPR -A wrote: ↑16 Sep 2019, 14:38With Mercedes having put so much of effort in building race pace, which was obviously evident with Lewis being on tail on almost all the recent GPs, it would be interesting to see what Lewis can do if he is not starting from pole. It would be foolish to not bet on him getting a pole, due to their superior slow corner performance, but it would nevertheless be interesting. Hungary offered a glimpse of Mercedes race pace and an impeccable strategy with which Lewis could hunt down Max on a track notorious for lack of overtaking. Singapore is notorious too in terms of lack of overtaking and it would be interesting to see what Lewis can do. With both championships almost having been wrapped up, the only interesting spectacle is to watch Lewis hunting down drivers ahead.
Does C5 (Softs) even last a whole lap, considering the energy that would be put in them around this track and the higher ambient temperatures?
This would be the last round of car updates for the leaders, as they would have to move all of their resources to next year's car. So, it's pretty much this is the last that we could watch car updates. Most other stuff would be next year's developmental parts that teams would run in free practice.
The C5 tire can probably do about 14 laps before it drops off, so a two stop is likely. Neither the C2 or C3 tire will be fit for one stopping. Perhaps a S M H is the way to go?