Still has a small advantage. If you run a bit less fuel in the race, you can also lower the ride height a bit in qualy. Teams aren't allowed to change the ride height inbetween qualy and the race, so you want to do as much as you can to have the lowest ride height in qualy without scraping the plank in the race when the tank is at its fullest.bhallg2k wrote:I think someone forgot that cars no longer have to run race-level fuel loads in qualifying.
I believe the Pirellis are as unpredictable as they are precisely because we don't have refueling anymore. Take away refueling and you have heavy cars on the grid. The unpredictable tyres give back the element of strategy to the race we would otherwise lose. If you bring back refueling, there would be less need for unpredictable tyres to spice up the race.Websta wrote:And you were just bemoaning the teams "inability to calculate the correct fuel levels" - how do you think they would cope with refuelling for optimal stint times based around the unpredictable durability of the Pirellis?
It also depends on the track. Malaysia is 60% on throttle, while Monaco is only 42%. 18/60=30% less throttle. Lets just make the (very naive) assumption that equals 30% less fuel needed. You will be most likely underfueling for Monaco (and they will calculate in 1 or even several safety cars), while Malaysia will indeed be more about topping the fuel tank and scraping it at the end of the race.Tommy Cookers wrote:FWIW I think that 'fuel saving' does not mean the car was under-fuelled
IIRC the tankage is limited at 195 litres and they fill to this
for max power the fuel:'air ratio can be set about 20% rich (ie 20% of the fuel is being thrown away unburnt)
but the engines are more efficient (although slightly less powerful) with a neutral or slightly rich 'fuel saving' mixture
(the rich 'max power' mixture benefits combustion consistency at very high rpm, so its use is related to that)
195 litres is not enough for the cars to run the rich mixture for the whole race
so they must run some or many laps in 'fuel saving' mode (varying with circuit and conditions etc)
so the 'fuel saving' instruction does not mean they started with less than a full tank (IMO)
in another thread someone kindly posted fuel consumption figures (almost equal for all races)
to me this fits with my view (that they use a 195 litre fill regardless of race)
Hmmm, sounds like a Nico fan...Clew wrote:I'm angry because Merc's engineers got it wrong and ruined the Malaysian race's conclusion.
Yes, does sound like a Nico fan.Clew wrote:Nico should have had the opportunity to continue on and fight the Red Bulls or at least pass LH.
I think you are completely right about this. The uncertainty regarding how much you need to conserve your tires results in an uncertainty of what is the optimal ammount of fuel with which to start the race.bhallg2k wrote:I think that particular problem is born out of the need to conserve tires. Teams know they have to do it, and they know that periods of tire conservation are coincidentally periods of fuel conservation. As such, it makes little sense to fill the car with enough fuel for the driver to push every lap.
"The perfect racing car crosses the finish line first and subsequently falls into its component parts." ~ Ferdinand Porsche
"The perfect racing car crosses the finish line first and subsequently runs out of fuel." ~ Me (and Red Bull and MGP)
I can think of a third. It's possible Mercedes simply thought Red Bull were carrying the same amount of fuel as themselves - and were equally surprised to see Webber and Vettel drive off into the sunset.Stradivarius wrote:One possible reason why Mercedes ended up with less fuel than expected is that they didn't have to be as careful with the tires as they thought.....Another reason is of course that Mercedes miscalculated the fuel consumption, but I find it more likely that they were gambling on safety car or rain.
Agreed.bhallg2k wrote:I think that particular problem is born out of the need to conserve tires. Teams know they have to do it, and they know that periods of tire conservation are coincidentally periods of fuel conservation. As such, it makes little sense to fill the car with enough fuel for the driver to push every lap.
I can't find anything in either the sporting or technical regulations that details a maximum fuel cell capacity.Tommy Cookers wrote:FWIW I think that 'fuel saving' does not mean the car was under-fuelled
IIRC the tankage is limited at 195 litres and they fill to this
[...]
Refuelling did not really spice up racing all that much. It certainly added strategy, but fairly inflexible strategy - I really like the adaptable strategies that come from the Pirellis, but I do dislike most of the other things that these tyres bring before I get my ass chewed. It also didn't eliminate drivers running out of fuel. I recall Vettel running out of fuel completely in Valencia 2009, and I am sure there are many other examples. The various examples of running out of fuel during qualifying last year are an example of how teams will still manage to make the "mistakes" that you were talking about earlier.Phil wrote:I believe the Pirellis are as unpredictable as they are precisely because we don't have refueling anymore. Take away refueling and you have heavy cars on the grid. The unpredictable tyres give back the element of strategy to the race we would otherwise lose. If you bring back refueling, there would be less need for unpredictable tyres to spice up the race.Websta wrote:And you were just bemoaning the teams "inability to calculate the correct fuel levels" - how do you think they would cope with refuelling for optimal stint times based around the unpredictable durability of the Pirellis?
In regards to the thread - I also think it's not only the fuel that caused the race disrepute. It's also the element of the still relatively unknown tyres. The fuel level inconsistencies will solve itself as teams find out more about the predictability of the car, the tyres and the track conditions. This will happen naturally has the season progresses IMO.
I think my point has been misunderstood. I didn't say the racing during refueling was better - more to the point, I was saying that when the FIA banned refueling, there was a need to bring in an element that would make the races interesting. The rule that two different tyre compounds must be used and perhaps the limited working window of the tyre. If we didn't have those two elements, with cars being fueled to complete the race, you'd have the boring scenario of the quickest car pulling away and rarely finding itself in traffic. By having to use two different tyre compounds, you are forcing the teams to still do pit-stops and bring the quicker cars into traffic. The unpredictability of the tyres just enhances this even more.Websta wrote:Refuelling did not really spice up racing all that much. It certainly added strategy, but fairly inflexible strategy - I really like the adaptable strategies that come from the Pirellis, but I do dislike most of the other things that these tyres bring before I get my ass chewed. It also didn't eliminate drivers running out of fuel. I recall Vettel running out of fuel completely in Valencia 2009, and I am sure there are many other examples. The various examples of running out of fuel during qualifying last year are an example of how teams will still manage to make the "mistakes" that you were talking about earlier.
Refuelling also doesn't generate the close racing that we see with the Pirellis - however contrived you feel the racing we see is, personally I am not all that convinced by some of the drivers moaning.
Somewhere in here someone has already covered that possibility. Summed up; it meant that the race strategy was a gamble because they bet on rain, and it didn't end up raining so they lost out.FoxHound wrote:Was there also not the expectation of showers in Malaysia?
Rain = lower fuel consumption = lower fuel levels.