Not yet. It will be from Monza on.
It wasn't done for F1. It was done for the 24h race.yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 02:34Any source for that? I don't remember that. I did a quick search on google and found nothing.
I still found nothing on internet reporting or mentioning this resurface thing.godlameroso wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 14:29It wasn't done for F1. It was done for the 24h race.yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 02:34Any source for that? I don't remember that. I did a quick search on google and found nothing.
https://www.f1supernews.com/2018/09/30/ ... surfacing/yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 14:37And frankly I don't buy it either. The laptime improvement doesn't really support that, unless they did a bad resurface job like Silverston 2018.
Ahead of this year’s grand prix, parts of the circuit were resurfaced.
Those include a patch just before Turn 1, the approach to Turn 8 and the area on which the top two drivers on the grid line up.
That section stretches into P3’s grid box but only partially.
Facts don't care about your ability to use search engines.yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 14:37I still found nothing on internet reporting or mentioning this resurface thing.godlameroso wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 14:29It wasn't done for F1. It was done for the 24h race.yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 02:34
Any source for that? I don't remember that. I did a quick search on google and found nothing.
And frankly I don't buy it either. The laptime improvement doesn't really support that, unless they did a bad resurface job like Silverston 2018.
The smugness they repaved a single corner worth mentioning, rest of the track is the same, yet you put it like they redid the whole track silverstone 2019 style. Get a grip.godlameroso wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 15:19Facts don't care about your ability to use search engines.yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 14:37I still found nothing on internet reporting or mentioning this resurface thing.
And frankly I don't buy it either. The laptime improvement doesn't really support that, unless they did a bad resurface job like Silverston 2018.
Which corner was it?Juzh wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 15:59The smugness they repaved a single corner worth mentioning, rest of the track is the same, yet you put it like they redid the whole track silverstone 2019 style. Get a grip.godlameroso wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 15:19Facts don't care about your ability to use search engines.yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 14:37
I still found nothing on internet reporting or mentioning this resurface thing.
And frankly I don't buy it either. The laptime improvement doesn't really support that, unless they did a bad resurface job like Silverston 2018.
Probably wanting to not be blown by on the straights, keep cars behind on the twisties.
I responded to you a few posts back with an article and a quote that listed everything that was resurfaced (not much).yelistener wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 16:06Which corner was it?
Cosworth V12 for everybody.
Erm, they have to make one in line with the F1 regs for the year. FIA/F1 will not change just because there are no enginesJordanMugen wrote: ↑28 Aug 2020, 17:59Cosworth V12 for everybody.
They already built a nice 3.9L 65-degree V12 for Gordon Murray Automotive, with 653 @ 11,500rpm with 60,000 mile rebuild interval.
Put pneumatic valves on it, up the rev limit to make 1020hp @ 18,000rpm, lower the rebuild interval to 5,000 miles (obviously strengthening the bottom end as appropriate) and you have yourself a great racing engine.
The-Race.com put up a nice article noting the Pirelli tyres are designed and made to a tight budget, as most of Pirelli's F1 expenditures is for advertising costs. They pay to be the supplier, that payment includes all the trackside advertising hoardings and so on, and then they supply the actual tyres to F1 teams for free AFAIK.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑25 Aug 2020, 18:58Yes it is difficult because pirelli are incompetent. ... And NOBODY ever asked them to make "degrading" wet tire, they just can't do better.