They've been fortunate with the tracks that have had sprint races suiting their car. This will be the first one that diverges from that trend.
At Suzuka temps were very high on Sunday (track over 40, air temp over 25) and Merc had no degradation advantage over Ferrari. If you look at the last 5 races or so, this remains true.ringo wrote: ↑01 Oct 2023, 23:52I think Ferrari usuallys runs well but degrade quickly in the heat. Mercedes need the heat to switch on the tyres and they do run well on the hards. Mclarens quick switch on may not be so advantageous here and I am not sure how good their deg is. But this track looks like it will suit mclaren chassis well.
I do not know where to put Aston. Somewhere between Alpine and Alpha Tauri.
I agree with ....Organic.....on this point. They've gone from eye watering in just how fast they went off, to almost entirely palletable in this regard.organic wrote: ↑02 Oct 2023, 12:34At Suzuka temps were very high on Sunday (track over 40, air temp over 25) and Merc had no degradation advantage over Ferrari. If you look at the last 5 races or so, this remains true.ringo wrote: ↑01 Oct 2023, 23:52I think Ferrari usuallys runs well but degrade quickly in the heat. Mercedes need the heat to switch on the tyres and they do run well on the hards. Mclarens quick switch on may not be so advantageous here and I am not sure how good their deg is. But this track looks like it will suit mclaren chassis well.
I do not know where to put Aston. Somewhere between Alpine and Alpha Tauri.
Compare that to the early part of the season, before Austria, you can see they had worse Deg than Merc.
Shovlin echoed this sentiment in comments he made after Suzuka race.
I think this is unsurprising as I would not say Merc had significantly better degradation compared to everyone else earlier in the year: it was more that Ferrari were disproportionately hard on the tyres compared to cars with similar amounts of downforce. So Ferrari are now up to speed in terms of tyre understanding and that advantage for Merc has faded this year
Losail is another circuit that's very tough on the tyres so I think this will once again show Ferrari will be similar to Merc, amr etc on deg
.MARIO ISOLA - PIRELLI HEAD OF MOTORSPORT
Another new beginning in Qatar.
“Formula 1 now returns to Qatar, two years after its debut there in 2021. But in many ways, it’s another new beginning,
as the cars are now very different to the ones we saw a couple of years ago and the Losail circuit has been completely resurfaced,
with modified kerbs as well.
On paper, the track’s main features remain the same – with a main straight just over a kilometre long and 16 corners – but it’s clear that the changes made over the last two years mean that the data collected from the first grand prix is only relatively useful.
Money is no object in Qatar.
It was mostly front wing damage. The front wings ran really close to the ground in previous regs. This will not be the case with current regs. Floor damage is more likely.
I dont remember well, but wasn't it assumed punctures were due to kerb strikes?