While he should crush him, how confident would you be that he will crush him. I think Hulk will be trying to use these two weekend to showcase his talent/worth to any future employers. He will be giving it his all!
No thanks!
Track temp was 51 or 52 °C, and in general Silverstone is a track that punishes tires.JordanMugen wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 17:45No thanks!
Why don't these F1 teams take care of their tyres properly when it's hot.
For these things to be undrivable and eat tyres just because it's a little bit warm (wow, 34 degrees ) is utterly ridiculous! What if it was a 45 degree summer in Australia thanks to a northerly wind from the desert and a bright shining sun with 60 degree track temperature, surely they would be prepared for that!?
Totally different track layout. Silverstone is a proper track full of fast corners.JordanMugen wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 17:45No thanks!
Why don't these F1 teams take care of their tyres properly when it's hot.
For these things to be undrivable and eat tyres just because it's a little bit warm (wow, 34 degrees ) is utterly ridiculous! What if it was a 45 degree summer in Australia thanks to a northerly wind from the desert and a bright shining sun with 60 degree track temperature, surely they would be prepared for that!?
godlameroso wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 18:05Another interesting tidbit is that the wind will be stronger the next two days. I'm glad the heat affects the cars and makes them closer. I missed the long runs, how are they looking, there's no FIA data yet.
Every forecast (BBC, MetOffice, Yr.No, Accuweather, Wunderground, etc.) is predicting a 10C drop (that's roughly 20F) going into the weekend. Saturday will be warmer and more humid (feels like 25-26C) but Sunday should firmly be low 20C territory.godlameroso wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 18:38Wow it looks very close between Verstappen and Mercedes. This could all change tomorrow and Sunday when it'll be slightly cooler, although I don't think it will be much cooler than today. It will largely depend on the clouds and how they affect track temperature.
Their models, which are outdated by the way, new stuff coming in the pipeline. Anyway, they underestimate water vapor heating, so they overestimate temperature drop. It all depends on the clouds really, the sun shine will raise track temperatures nicely.mkay wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 18:45Every forecast (BBC, MetOffice, Yr.No, Accuweather, Wunderground, etc.) is predicting a 10C drop (that's roughly 20F) going into the weekend. Saturday will be warmer and more humid (feels like 25-26C) but Sunday should firmly be low 20C territory.godlameroso wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 18:38Wow it looks very close between Verstappen and Mercedes. This could all change tomorrow and Sunday when it'll be slightly cooler, although I don't think it will be much cooler than today. It will largely depend on the clouds and how they affect track temperature.
Based on today's running, RB will fancy their chance next weekend, though, with temps forecast between 27-30C throughout the weekend, and softer tyres.
Still, racing here in the States, track temps are 55* + from May through September, on tracks as fast or faster, and pavement that is arguably rougher on many. Obviously there is aero load vs. the tire compound, and as far as stressing the tires go in road racing, F1 is it. I think part of F1 is so tech focused, that anything a little outside a design comfort zone is a talking point, where it may not be in other series. That's just part of the show of F1.LM10 wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 18:01Totally different track layout. Silverstone is a proper track full of fast corners.JordanMugen wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 17:45No thanks!
Why don't these F1 teams take care of their tyres properly when it's hot.
For these things to be undrivable and eat tyres just because it's a little bit warm (wow, 34 degrees ) is utterly ridiculous! What if it was a 45 degree summer in Australia thanks to a northerly wind from the desert and a bright shining sun with 60 degree track temperature, surely they would be prepared for that!?