I'm just finding out a little more now about the track. Things I missed before the race. The track has had a protective coating put down on it which prevents the track rubbering up in the same way that it used to. Typically, the rears being the bigger tyres they gain more from the rubbering in of the track than the front and giving more grip to the rear, also making the track front limited. Coupled with the big front tyres, this meant that the track stopped being front limited like it still was at the last Chinese GP, although even then it was not as front limited as before due to the wider front tyres.LionsHeart wrote: ↑21 Apr 2024, 21:12Interesting. Ok, I'll take note.mwillems wrote: ↑21 Apr 2024, 20:03The teams haven't been here since 2019.LionsHeart wrote: ↑21 Apr 2024, 19:59
I didn't really understand this point. This is the first time I've heard about this. On the remaining tracks from 2022, the tires are the same size. And the front or rear limit, depending on the race track, remains the same.
I found this on the BBC that was posted before the race, saying something similar, but I guess it must have changed a while ago.
7:55
What strategy to expect?
Andrew Benson
BBC F1 correspondent
Just as in Japan two weeks ago, this race is expected to be predominantly a two-stop strategy. Tyre wear is high, and whereas in the past China was a track where the front tyres were most under stress, the wider tyres introduced from 2017 have changed that to the rear. There will be a lot of tyre management in the race, with drivers lapping well off the theoretical maximum pace.
I'd seen in a few places before the race that it was expected to be rear limited and is no longer front limited.
You know, it reminded me of 2009 when slicks came out again. Due to the lack of grooves on the tires, and the tire size remained the same, the balance of the cars began to manifest itself more in oversteer. Those who had a lot of downforce on the rear axle did not suffer much from this. Then, already in 2010, if I remember correctly, the front tires were already made. Or did it happen in 2011 when Pirelli arrived?
Edit: Front tire dimensions
Having returned slicks to the championship, the FIA decided to keep the previous dimensions of grooved tires. When it became clear that the front and rear tires were wearing unevenly, providing different levels of grip, it was too late to make adjustments. In 2009, this error seriously complicated the work of teams trying to compensate for the difference in the weight distribution of their cars.
https://i.ibb.co/TY5HH9R/F0-A8-FB2-A-4- ... 1814-C.gif
For 2010, the size of the front tires will be reduced, the load will be distributed more evenly, but teams need to optimize the aerodynamics, taking into account more space between the tires and the nose cone.
Hirohide Hamashima, Bridgestone: “For 2010, the front tires will become narrower, which will allow for better balance and more even grip between the front and rear wheels. When the championship switched to slicks, it was decided to inherit the dimensions from grooved tires, as a result the front wheels provided better grip than the rear, but now the front tires will become narrower and the situation will change.”
A very good article:
https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/mark ... rand-prix/