Done so. Thanks. Hopefully it brings some good discussion
Done so. Thanks. Hopefully it brings some good discussion
I think so, yesPlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 16:09Are we getting free tyre choice to start the race on this year?
Yes, no more q2 tyre rulePlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 16:09Are we getting free tyre choice to start the race on this year?
Can you check whether my PM got through please. Itβs said in outbox rather than sent. Thanks
Got it - thanks. Appreciated
Yes we are.PlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 16:09Are we getting free tyre choice to start the race on this year?
.codetower wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 17:14.PlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 16:09Are we getting free tyre choice to start the race on this year?
Yes we are.
What I'm not clear about though is if there will be no C3 available for the race. From that graphic above looks like only C1 and C2 for race.
You need to use two different compounds so everyone will be on a one stop since it's the two hardest compounds. It kind of negates any type of tyre strategy... the only strategy being do you go hard->medium... or medium->hard.Wouter wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 17:16.codetower wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 17:14.PlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 16:09Are we getting free tyre choice to start the race on this year?
Yes we are.
What I'm not clear about though is if there will be no C3 available for the race. From that graphic above looks like only C1 and C2 for race.
Yes, that's how I read it too. Only the C1 and C2 in the race. Seems strange to me.
Maybe. Pirelli representative said from the data they've seen during the 3 days indicated a 2-stop is likelycodetower wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 17:28You need to use two different compounds so everyone will be on a one stop since it's the two hardest compounds. It kind of negates any type of tyre strategy... the only strategy being do you go hard->medium... or medium->hard.
You can still use softs in the race but it's not mandatory like in quali. However you have to use two different compounds in the race just like before.codetower wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 17:14Yes we are.PlatinumZealot wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 16:09Are we getting free tyre choice to start the race on this year?
What I'm not clear about though is if there will be no C3 available for the race. From that graphic above looks like only C1 and C2 for race.
If the cars are consistently hitting the ground hard due to porpoising then you will damage the car over the course of a race weekend to the point where even the most robust of components will fail and may you run out of spare parts before the race so have to do running repairs on floors etc that might well fail in the race. We'll only know if it's been overstated once the race is over. Racing puts a lot more stresses and strains on the cars and drivers than testing ever will.silver wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 10:29I think this is being overplayed. Reliability has been at it's best in F1 and it's only getting better. Even with such 'porpoising' issues, teams completed enormous amount of mileage. Some teams even completed race sims. All this without having to go through serious damage to any part of the car. In fact with a such simplified cars in terms of appendages, the amount of carbon fibre debris in clashes would be significantly less which also means, despite some contacts, the damage may not hurt a great deal on aero performance. Drivers just need to be cautious to avoid kerbs and especially if there are sausage curbs as now the underfloor is significantly important than ever. By next week there would be some solutions for the porpoising issues, either temporary or permanent.
I wish they would further simply the floor area and remove all those cuts, curves, bends, bulges and appendages with change of rules to make the floor inline with the FIA show car.
They did multiple race distances in 3 days testing, but nobody broke floors. Like I mentioned already, some cars did race sims without issues. Some cars had usual damages that we have seen in the past while running over kerbs. That's why in my opinion it's being overstated. As usual, there will be some cars that would hit reliability problems as nobody pushed the engine components to the fullest. It's an issue that we have witnessed in the past seasons.taperoo2k wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 20:00If the cars are consistently hitting the ground hard due to porpoising then you will damage the car over the course of a race weekend to the point where even the most robust of components will fail and may you run out of spare parts before the race so have to do running repairs on floors etc that might well fail in the race. We'll only know if it's been overstated once the race is over. Racing puts a lot more stresses and strains on the cars and drivers than testing ever will.silver wrote: β14 Mar 2022, 10:29I think this is being overplayed. Reliability has been at it's best in F1 and it's only getting better. Even with such 'porpoising' issues, teams completed enormous amount of mileage. Some teams even completed race sims. All this without having to go through serious damage to any part of the car. In fact with a such simplified cars in terms of appendages, the amount of carbon fibre debris in clashes would be significantly less which also means, despite some contacts, the damage may not hurt a great deal on aero performance. Drivers just need to be cautious to avoid kerbs and especially if there are sausage curbs as now the underfloor is significantly important than ever. By next week there would be some solutions for the porpoising issues, either temporary or permanent.
I wish they would further simply the floor area and remove all those cuts, curves, bends, bulges and appendages with change of rules to make the floor inline with the FIA show car.
Aside from reliability, it'll be interesting to see how the race evolves in terms of how the drivers go about overtaking over the course of a race. Will it be tentative or caution thrown to the wind ?