Wow, trolling so early in the weekend...Artur Craft wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 16:38Hey, what happened to the super duper, mighty, perfect Mercedes car ?
Wow, trolling so early in the weekend...Artur Craft wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 16:38Hey, what happened to the super duper, mighty, perfect Mercedes car ?
I always have the belief starting on the softer tyre is always the best strategy. Going longer on the first stint on a harder compound usually means while you are staying out to run long and maybe not going as fast as possible, the other guy has gone as fast as possible and is on new mediums enjoying the speed the fresh tyres give.drunkf1fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 17:49even if they've decided they have to two stop, starting on mediums and going longer is surely better than finding out they have terrible deg vs people on mediums and ending up pitting into traffic. If they need the second stop they can do it later in the race with a more rubbered in track, they've far more chance of pitting earlier than others on the same tire but being clear of F1.5 so not getting held up. I can't see a single reason to start on softs and more so considering Leclerc had a nice lap on mediums there seemed to be no reason for them to change it last second by going on the softs.
2 years ago, Norris was in Euro F3, he's come so far in such a short time, and still performing outstandingly. As you say Norris is doing a good job. 1 thing he lacks is a little aggression but that can be added fairly easily.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 18:57Norris is showing up Sainz, in qualifying, who is generally well regarded. I think Norris is doing a good job.Artur Craft wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 17:16
Max and Leclerc are on another league compared to Norris, who I think is very hyped. I see Russel and Albon doing a more impressive job but Norris is getting all the hype and the spotlight.
You need to lead to make use of the softer starting tyre. If the medium tyre gets ahead and controls the pace, you lose because you put earlier and come out on the slower tyre. The medium can then pit later before swapping to the faster tyre to finish.ringo wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 19:02
I always have the belief starting on the softer tyre is always the best strategy. Going longer on the first stint on a harder compound usually means while you are staying out to run long and maybe not going as fast as possible, the other guy has gone as fast as possible and is on new mediums enjoying the speed the fresh tyres give.
There is no cliff like there was years ago anymore. The tyres won't lose performance dramatically out of nothing.izzy wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 18:18yes and the problem is wear, not graining, so they could lose several seconds in one lap if they wear down to the base layer before they pit, they can't wait for the driver to say "the tyres are going off", cos it's the cliff, going: grip, grip, grip, nothingdrunkf1fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 17:49
even if they've decided they have to two stop, starting on mediums and going longer is surely better than finding out they have terrible deg vs people on mediums and ending up pitting into traffic. If they need the second stop they can do it later in the race with a more rubbered in track, they've far more chance of pitting earlier than others on the same tire but being clear of F1.5 so not getting held up. I can't see a single reason to start on softs and more so considering Leclerc had a nice lap on mediums there seemed to be no reason for them to change it last second by going on the softs.
I can see a point in that if the soft tyre sits behind the medium for 15 laps, then as the soft starts to drop off, they pit for new mediums. they come out 1 pit stop behind +2-3 seconds. The medium runner can't pit, unless they take the hard. When their window is open to pit for softs for the standard 1 stop, the guy who pitted a while ago has now reduced the gap to 15 seconds with his new mediums. The leader pits for fresh softs but has to now pass on track, which is likely but a risk nonetheless.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 19:08You need to lead to make use of the softer starting tyre. If the medium tyre gets ahead and controls the pace, you lose because you put earlier and come out on the slower tyre. The medium can then pit later before swapping to the faster tyre to finish.ringo wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 19:02
I always have the belief starting on the softer tyre is always the best strategy. Going longer on the first stint on a harder compound usually means while you are staying out to run long and maybe not going as fast as possible, the other guy has gone as fast as possible and is on new mediums enjoying the speed the fresh tyres give.
So, the Ferraris need to be leading after the first lap to make their soft choice work.
oh yes there must be an engineering reason why Ferrari did it, but Mario Isola was saying how the tyres have been wearing at Silverstone, with the base layer being exposed now the outer running layer is only 3mm thick. That was the original plan, to generate pitstops with wear instead of graining or blistersLM10 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 19:11
There is no cliff like there was years ago anymore. The tyres won't lose performance dramatically out of nothing.
If Ferrari went for Softs, it's because they analyzed and came to the conclusion that this might be better for them. It worked in Austria already. It's a big wrong conclusion being made that Ferrari's decision to start on Softs was the reason for Leclerc's loss in Austria. They were doing pretty fine on Softs, being faster than the rest on Mediums and until they pitted there were no signs of tyre wear or decreasing performance in relation to others. The mistake was that they overreacted and wanted to prevent an undercut from Bottas, hence their way early pit stop. They could have easily gone several more laps and then Leclerc could have had as fresh Mediums as Max and probably have defended his position.
So let's wait and see first. I don't think that Ferrari foolishly finished Q2 on Softs with both cars today, without sensing a benefit.
Let the dude drive, it's stupid to give someone already a championship title in the future but not has proven anything yet in F1. Besides Sainz has been beaten by everyone on the grid so far, he's not A class for sure.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 19:032 years ago, Norris was in Euro F3, he's come so far in such a short time, and still performing outstandingly. As you say Norris is doing a good job. 1 thing he lacks is a little aggression but that can be added fairly easily.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 18:57Norris is showing up Sainz, in qualifying, who is generally well regarded. I think Norris is doing a good job.Artur Craft wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 17:16
Max and Leclerc are on another league compared to Norris, who I think is very hyped. I see Russel and Albon doing a more impressive job but Norris is getting all the hype and the spotlight.
Max, Charles, Lando and George are all 4 future champions. it just depends how good the 4 teams perform who they drive for.
You were 100% spot on in that they couldn't energize the tires enough today. The cooler track temperatures were a factor.erudite450 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 16:38My theory is that their tyre preparation was not ideal for the 2nd runs. I totally disagree with Martin Brundle that Hamilton overheated his tyres in the first run because Hamilton was actually quicker than Bottas in the 3rd sector in that 1st run. I think that the Mercedes is softer on the tyres than the Ferraris which means they need to push harder on the preparation as they did in the 1st runs but their preparation for the 2nd runs was compromised with traffic.
Hmm. Interesting but still not buying this from Toto always crying Wolf; all other teams struggled to improve lap times but in Q3 Merc had solid one lap pace with massive gains.zibby43 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 20:44AMuS reporting that the reason for Mercedes not destroying the competition in qualifying was because of the low temperatures.
Track surface temperatures were 10 degrees lower than on Friday. Toto Wolff: "We had a hard time getting the tyres into their working window."
Which I imagine tomorrow won’t be a problem as constant driving will build temps also I guess a driver would much rather have a tyre that needs to be pushed to build temps over a tyre that is too hot and starts to blister.zibby43 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 20:45You were 100% spot on in that they couldn't energize the tires enough today. The cooler track temperatures were a factor.erudite450 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 16:38My theory is that their tyre preparation was not ideal for the 2nd runs. I totally disagree with Martin Brundle that Hamilton overheated his tyres in the first run because Hamilton was actually quicker than Bottas in the 3rd sector in that 1st run. I think that the Mercedes is softer on the tyres than the Ferraris which means they need to push harder on the preparation as they did in the 1st runs but their preparation for the 2nd runs was compromised with traffic.
Yep, and to that point, I think with all the unknowns about degradation on the new surface tomorrow, Merc opted for a setup that was going to be easy on the tires during the race.Restomaniac wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 20:50Which I imagine tomorrow won’t be a problem as constant driving will build temps also I guess a driver would much rather have a tyre that needs to be pushed to build temps over a tyre that is too hot and starts to blister.zibby43 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 20:45You were 100% spot on in that they couldn't energize the tires enough today. The cooler track temperatures were a factor.erudite450 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 16:38
My theory is that their tyre preparation was not ideal for the 2nd runs. I totally disagree with Martin Brundle that Hamilton overheated his tyres in the first run because Hamilton was actually quicker than Bottas in the 3rd sector in that 1st run. I think that the Mercedes is softer on the tyres than the Ferraris which means they need to push harder on the preparation as they did in the 1st runs but their preparation for the 2nd runs was compromised with traffic.