Simone Berra from Pirelli again giving some insight for Italian media.
https://www-formulapassion-it.translate ... r_pto=wapp
“The C5 is the softest compound in the Pirelli range,” continues Berra. “If the C4 we saw in Jeddah was already very high-performance, but with a very narrow grip peak , the C5 is from the same family of compounds and has very similar behaviour. If you are unable to balance the temperatures of the front with the rear, you risk not having the front tires ready, ending up suffering from understeer and having to apply large steering wheel angles. At the end of the lap, this causes you to oversteer, due to the fact that the front was initially missing."
This is the same thing he mentioned after Jeddah Q, Leclerc had unbalanced temperatures and less adhesive grip in his first run. In his 2nd run he didn't hit the temperature window perfectly, but there was better balance between axles and more adhesive grip since he only did 1 out lap before push lap.
It looks like the way to balance tyre Q and Race performance the best way would be to leave something on the table in Q in terms of outright pace. It's hardly a coincidence Max rarely seems to be really pushing on his Q3 laps. Last year Ferrari were able to hit the Q window very well, but always at the cost of race pace - either entirely or "only" on Hards. It was a similar situation in 2022, but less pronounced and often related to big temperature fluctuations during the race.
Ferrari may have gone a bit too much towards the race pace with SF24 design and sacrificed the capability to consistently hit the Q tyre window in low-fuel trim. In any case, I understand now why Vasseur insists they need to find 4 tenths more than RB, whatever RB is doing and however they are managing their tyres this is what Ferrari needs to be able to consistently challenge them and have a bit of margin to be able to manage this Q window in the right way. Until they get that from aero side, they will try to do what they can.