2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

For ease of use, there is one thread per grand prix where you can discuss everything during that specific GP weekend. You can find these threads here.
LM10
LM10
121
Joined: 07 Mar 2018, 00:07

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

GPR-A wrote:
12 May 2018, 17:08
LM10 wrote:
12 May 2018, 17:03
GPR-A wrote:
12 May 2018, 17:01
At the beginning of this weekend, there a wide expectation that Mercedes would rely heavily on Softs, due to their tyre choices. Look where things stand!
Ok and what's your point? :)
The point is, the performance difference between SS and S was different for different teams. It's not like, Ferrari being faster on S means they would have been even faster on SS. They realized that their car isn't behaving well in SS and went for S, whereas Mercedes realized their car works well on SS and went with that for Q3!
True, but Ferrari not working well on SS doesn't change the fact that SS is a faster tyre than S. In the first run both Vettel and Kimi made huge mistakes. After that Ferrari went on S maybe because they didn't have enough time left to bring the SS in the right working range. Mercedes managed to do it.

User avatar
atanatizante
115
Joined: 10 Mar 2011, 15:33

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Could someone tell me what was Lewis trying to say to Seb there?

Image

I think he should get a reprimand, at least!!!
"I don`t have all the answers. Try Google!"
Jesus

User avatar
Phil
66
Joined: 25 Sep 2012, 16:22

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

LM10 wrote:
12 May 2018, 22:37
True, but Ferrari not working well on SS doesn't change the fact that SS is a faster tyre than S. In the first run both Vettel and Kimi made huge mistakes. After that Ferrari went on S maybe because they didn't have enough time left to bring the SS in the right working range. Mercedes managed to do it.
You are clearly grasping at straws here. The SS isnt working right on this track (overheats). It was very obvious in FP2 when the track surface was even warmer (40+ degrees). The softs were better for all teams, but differing tire allocations and race strategy factored in that not everyone used the soft for their Q3 runs. Obviously Mercedes was already quickest on the first Q3 run, so Ferrari took a gamble.

The difference between the SS is very very small on this track.
Not for nothing, Rosberg's Championship is the only thing that lends credibility to Hamilton's recent success. Otherwise, he'd just be the guy who's had the best car. — bhall II
#Team44 supporter

nirvaand
nirvaand
0
Joined: 14 Apr 2018, 10:27

Re: 2018 McLaren F1 Team - Renault

Post

Just checked the weather forecast, chance of rain for race tomorrow just dropped from 43% to almost 8% in the last few hours. Chance of rain for the race looking increasingly bleak.

Edax
Edax
47
Joined: 08 Apr 2014, 22:47

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Phil wrote:
12 May 2018, 22:48
LM10 wrote:
12 May 2018, 22:37
True, but Ferrari not working well on SS doesn't change the fact that SS is a faster tyre than S. In the first run both Vettel and Kimi made huge mistakes. After that Ferrari went on S maybe because they didn't have enough time left to bring the SS in the right working range. Mercedes managed to do it.
You are clearly grasping at straws here. The SS isnt working right on this track (overheats). It was very obvious in FP2 when the track surface was even warmer (40+ degrees). The softs were better for all teams, but differing tire allocations and race strategy factored in that not everyone used the soft for their Q3 runs. Obviously Mercedes was already quickest on the first Q3 run, so Ferrari took a gamble.

The difference between the SS is very very small on this track.
That makes the guys that made the tires in past days seem like magicians. With the exception of an odd Indianapolis weekend it was pretty much bolt on and go. A qualifier was just that, two laps of hair raising performance, no matter the track temperature, wind direction, or whatever excuses get thrown upon us nowadays.

This week Williams with all their F1 experience couldn’t get any of the tires to work. The pecking order shifts with a few degrees of track temperature. I wonder how many people the top teams have employed just to understand the tires, (talk about cost efficiency).

What is causing all these issues, Is it that the tires cannot keep up in the evolution of HP and downforce, or is it the concept of an engineered cliff that is making these tires so sensitive?

LM10
LM10
121
Joined: 07 Mar 2018, 00:07

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Phil wrote:
12 May 2018, 22:48
LM10 wrote:
12 May 2018, 22:37
True, but Ferrari not working well on SS doesn't change the fact that SS is a faster tyre than S. In the first run both Vettel and Kimi made huge mistakes. After that Ferrari went on S maybe because they didn't have enough time left to bring the SS in the right working range. Mercedes managed to do it.
You are clearly grasping at straws here. The SS isnt working right on this track (overheats). It was very obvious in FP2 when the track surface was even warmer (40+ degrees). The softs were better for all teams, but differing tire allocations and race strategy factored in that not everyone used the soft for their Q3 runs. Obviously Mercedes was already quickest on the first Q3 run, so Ferrari took a gamble.

The difference between the SS is very very small on this track.
Do you think that Mercedes would have been even faster on Softs?

User avatar
SectorOne
166
Joined: 26 May 2013, 09:51

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Regarding Pirelli changing the thickness of the compound:

"Such changes for specific events are unusual, but not unprecedented.
Pirelli requested a thinner tread for Spa and Monza in both 2011 and 2012."

https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/13522 ... 1-circuits
"If the only thing keeping a person decent is the expectation of divine reward, then brother that person is a piece of sh*t"

User avatar
Phil
66
Joined: 25 Sep 2012, 16:22

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Well, it’s all good. Different compounds mean different characteristics. Performance change with track conditions. Obviously, the SS is a very soft tire. Put too much energy into it and it eventually overheats. The problem at this track seems to be that with the track layout, you may have the ideal temps at the beginning but then lose it towards the end. The soft is less sensitive and can be pushed longer and more consistent. Track temperatures vary too.

The only problem is that teams need to choose their allocations for the race well in advance, because Pirelli need to know what to manufacture and what to bring. In other words, they need to decide well before the actual weekend. Some get it right, some dont.

Evidently, Williams gambled the wrong way. The SS was useless in Winter testing, but some at the time felt it was due to the extremely cold temperatures and that it would ‘work’ once they got here in May...


@LM10; yes. Toto said as much post-race on the ORF broadcast. Not much though, probably. As i said, the difference was very small. Just look at Ricciardo (S) vs Max (SS).
Not for nothing, Rosberg's Championship is the only thing that lends credibility to Hamilton's recent success. Otherwise, he'd just be the guy who's had the best car. — bhall II
#Team44 supporter

User avatar
F1Krof
94
Joined: 22 Feb 2016, 21:17

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

LM10 wrote:
12 May 2018, 23:20
Phil wrote:
12 May 2018, 22:48
LM10 wrote:
12 May 2018, 22:37
True, but Ferrari not working well on SS doesn't change the fact that SS is a faster tyre than S. In the first run both Vettel and Kimi made huge mistakes. After that Ferrari went on S maybe because they didn't have enough time left to bring the SS in the right working range. Mercedes managed to do it.
You are clearly grasping at straws here. The SS isnt working right on this track (overheats). It was very obvious in FP2 when the track surface was even warmer (40+ degrees). The softs were better for all teams, but differing tire allocations and race strategy factored in that not everyone used the soft for their Q3 runs. Obviously Mercedes was already quickest on the first Q3 run, so Ferrari took a gamble.

The difference between the SS is very very small on this track.
Do you think that Mercedes would have been even faster on Softs?
That's an interesting question.
Wroom wroom

Just_a_fan
Just_a_fan
593
Joined: 31 Jan 2010, 20:37

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Edax wrote:
12 May 2018, 23:13


What is causing all these issues, Is it that the tires cannot keep up in the evolution of HP and downforce, or is it the concept of an engineered cliff that is making these tires so sensitive?
I think it's the FIA's/Liberty's desire to "maintain the show" and have artificially limited tyres. If the FIA asked them to, PIrelli could make tyres that are consistent and with decent life. But they are being asked to make a series of "window" tyres. The windows, which Pirelli have to decide on many weeks ahead of the race in order to have time to make the tyres, are susceptable to track conditions that aren't always as they might be expected from historic data. The result is tyres that some find hard to get in to the window whilst others are ok. At a different track / under slightly different conditions the positions are reversed.

It's making the teams' lives very difficult, especially the bottom end of the grid.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.

User avatar
Vettel165
4
Joined: 06 Apr 2018, 20:46
Location: Maribor/Slovenia

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Oh dear.

Image

Lauda: Thank you for brand new tyres, they worked.
Pirelli guy: No problem, from now on the same tyres will be used for the entire season but it wont be told to other teams.
Lauda: I appreciate it, dont worry you will get yours 1 million dollars on your bank account.
Pirelli guy: Ok its a deal, if you want even more durable tyres you can always ask for it. We can design the tyres around your car, so you can win again.
Lauda: Thats what we thought also.
Pirelli guy: We will meet again, secret meeting at Canada GP if things wont work for you in next races?
Lauda: Alees klar, auf wiedersehen.

User avatar
godlameroso
309
Joined: 16 Jan 2010, 21:27
Location: Miami FL

Re: 2018 McLaren F1 Team - Renault

Post

nirvaand wrote:
12 May 2018, 23:12
Just checked the weather forecast, chance of rain for race tomorrow just dropped from 43% to almost 8% in the last few hours. Chance of rain for the race looking increasingly bleak.
It should be raining or drizzling now, and should continue until the morning, there's a small chance the track is damp come the race.
Saishū kōnā

makecry
makecry
19
Joined: 06 Mar 2016, 22:33

Re: 2018 McLaren F1 Team - Renault

Post

godlameroso wrote:
12 May 2018, 23:44
nirvaand wrote:
12 May 2018, 23:12
Just checked the weather forecast, chance of rain for race tomorrow just dropped from 43% to almost 8% in the last few hours. Chance of rain for the race looking increasingly bleak.
It should be raining or drizzling now, and should continue until the morning, there's a small chance the track is damp come the race.
Inters ---> Slicks would be ideal race tbh. I am not into wet races but changeable conditions make things exciting.

Duderino
Duderino
0
Joined: 05 Dec 2015, 15:28

Re: 2018 McLaren F1 Team - Renault

Post

Considering the different tyre specs compared to the Barcelona tests and the amount of upgrades from other teams, the team has done an absolutely stunning job. I believe they have improved with around ~1 second with this upgrade. Every single upgrade has been kept on the car. Just imagine how these upgrades might affect the race pace knowing how much it has done for the qualifying pace. Gotta give credit where credit is due! =D> =D>

User avatar
F1NAC
170
Joined: 31 Mar 2013, 22:35

Re: 2018 Spanish Grand Prix - Catalunya, May 11-13

Post

Stop moaning. It wont change anything. Ferrari will rise again