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#1 |
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...by changing the compounds of tyres on supply in the next 5 grands prix, that in theory will make things more interesting like in canada.
well done on bridgestones part, should make F1 even more entertaining. providing the choices are right ofcourse for the particular track for the tyres to not quite be as optimum as could be. link: http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2010/06/2...xciting-races/ |
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#3 |
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Dont suddenly expect a more races like Canada, that was a one off because of the very specific conditions to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.
The tyres have been too hard this year, as we've seen from people doing almost all of a race on one set, so BS have just realised that they might as well just bring the soft and medium compounds to most races from now on as long as they think they wont fall apart. Might give the teams a few more options on strategy, but I'm doubtful that there will be any noticable change. |
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#4 |
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What a load o crap F1 is becoming. An expensive load of crap on top of that. Ayrton Senna thought that ALL racing involving pit stops was rubbish and rewarded those incapable of being good drivers - he would have HATED f1 today. It was bad enough as it was, this now is the equivalent of reversing the grid or some other artificial idiocy. |
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#5 |
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Dont suddenly expect a more races like Canada, that was a one off because of the very specific conditions to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. This is supposed to be grand prix racing where drivers are presumed to be the best with ability to not only race quickly but also take care of their equipment. This is after all what the junior formulae are supposed to sort out. I reckon Enzo Ferrari would have a few choice words to say over this and probably LEAVE f1 and take his team to go race sports cars instead. |
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#6 |
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#7 |
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What a load o crap F1 is becoming. An expensive load of crap on top of that. As I've said before (and will no doubt be boring and repeat this many more times) my ideal F1 tyre rules do not mandate a set number of stops, but offer tyres of sufficient difference that a hard can do an entire race if driven carefully and a super soft that can only manage a handful but is massively faster and let the drivers choose to go long and smooth or flat out and pit 2 or 3 times to make the distance. |
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#8 |
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#9 |
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Daniel is correct.
Why are tyres subject to such draconian restrictions? I can understand why there ios a standard ECU (To stop all teams cheating basically!!) but with tyres, they should just say a size and let each team work with which supplier they want. If we also allow different compounds between front and back tyres, I think we could slash the amount of required Aero and keep the same speeds. |
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#10 |
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As I've said before (and will no doubt be boring and repeat this many more times) my ideal F1 tyre rules do not mandate a set number of stops, but offer tyres of sufficient difference that a hard can do an entire race if driven carefully and a super soft that can only manage a handful but is massively faster and let the drivers choose to go long and smooth or flat out and pit 2 or 3 times to make the distance. I wonder if a better idea might be to only have super-softs that last 15-25 laps. Then you might get some variation between teams that can make it with 2 or 3 stops while others need 4. |
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#11 |
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Daniel is correct. I'm sure it reduces costs substantially as well, which I suspect is the main reason why most high-profile race series have moved to control tyre regulations. |
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#14 |
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#15 |
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#16 |
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Easier said than done though. There would be a very fine balance point where the soft and hard tyres are comparable over a race distance. If the tyre manufacturer didn't hit it perfectly, then all the teams' simulations would tell them which one was faster and everyone would end up on the same strategy. Which I guess was why the FIA felt they needed to force the teams to use both tyres. The general gist was that, yes, the compounds would need to be engineered to be similar over a race distance total time or else as you say everyone would figure out the optimum. The other option (IMO) is to starve the number crunchers of information. Perhaps remove or restrict telemetry (hmmmm can of worms that one) or have an intermediate compound tyre that won't be used on race day allowing set up and general data gathering but still making it a punt based on driver feeling. |
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#17 |
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Thing is though, in recent years a three or even four-stopper was usually theoretically fastest. And yet you only rarely saw three stops, and virtually never four. Why? Track position - the risk of getting bottled up in a race ruining Trulli-train scenario behind a one-stopper was far too high.
And - for that exact reason - if you balance things on a knife-edge between X-stops or Y-stops, leading teams will almost ALWAYS choose the option with fewer stops, even if more stops is nominally faster. |
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#18 |
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On the other hand - looking after tyres is something that Jenson is amongst the best at doing :-]]] ![]() |
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#19 |
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I'd rather let them bring multiple compounds and allowing teams to run on whatever they want whenever they want, instead of forcing teams to run on unfavourable tyres. It brings another element of unpredictability into the races, which is good. |
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#20 |
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Indeed, but as you say he has the problem of being a tenth slower than Hamilton in qualifying of late. There is also the issue of Lewis being pretty dandy at conserving his tyres in recent races as there is more pressure for drivers to adopt a conservative approach with fewer pitstops this season. Jenson is good at looking after his tyres but Lewis is not far behind in that aspect. The Mclaren drivers are pretty well matched and this is why Whitmarsh signed Jenson. It is the teams primary goal to win the Conatructors title this year. The driver's title is all well and good, but Ron Dennis wants the Constructors more, as does Dietrich Mateschitsz. |
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