Headlines

Whitmarsh warns of crisis
Teamwear finally in stock
Ecclestone in fresh V6 warning
Gurmit's View: Let's cut the crap....
Pirelli in quit threat
Monaco GP: Thursday Press Conference
Monaco GP: Practice notes - Pirelli
Monaco GP: Practice notes - Force India
Monaco GP: Practice notes - Lotus
Monaco GP: Practice notes - Ferrari

2013 Monaco GP Quicklinks

Teams Friday Saturday Sunday
Red Bull      
McLaren Notes    
Ferrari Notes    
Mercedes Notes    
Lotus Notes    
Williams Notes    
Force India Notes    
Sauber Notes    
Toro Rosso Notes    
Caterham      
Marussia Notes    
Pirelli Notes    
Times P1 P2      
Reports P1 P2

Related links

Date Title
17/07 German GP: Preview - Pirelli
08/07 British GP: Driver Tyre Strategies
08/07 British GP: Race notes - Pirelli
07/07 British GP: Qualifying notes - Pirelli
06/07 British GP: Practice notes - Pirelli
02/07 British GP: Preview - Pirelli
27/06 Alguersuari still confident of 2013 drive
26/06 Uncertainty surrounds Young Driver Test
26/06 Pirelli go testing at Spa
24/06 European GP: Driver Tyre Strategies

German GP: Practice notes - Pirelli

20/07/2012

Just two weeks after rain interrupted free practice at Silverstone, there were showers once again at Hockenheim for the first two free practice sessions at the German Grand Prix. This time however there was some dry running in the morning, enabling the teams to gather very limited information about the new experimental hard compound tyre, which was tested in free practice along with the usual allocation of 11 slick tyres for the weekend. The compounds nominated for the German Grand Prix are the P Zero White medium and P Zero Yellow soft. The experimental hard tyres are returned this evening, meaning that the teams will not be able run on them for the rest of the weekend.

The intermittent showers during free practice one meant that teams were often restricted to 10-minute runs, before the changing conditions made it too complex to properly evaluate tyres and parts. The teams tried the experimental hard and the medium slick tyres in the morning, while the two Sauber drivers, as well as McLaren's Lewis Hamilton, also ran on the Cinturato Green intermediate. The fastest time of the morning was set by McLaren driver Jenson Button, who established a benchmark of 1:16.595 on the medium tyre at the very beginning of the session, when the track was dry. He beat Hamilton in the runner-up spot by half a second, who set his time when the track dried out at the end of the session on an identical tyre.

The teams had planned to run on the soft tyre in the afternoon, in conditions that should theoretically be closer matched to the race, but then the rain fell even harder. This meant that the majority of drivers did not venture out until the last hour of the hour and a half session in order to avoid the worst of the standing water, running on the Cinturato Blue full wet tyre. As the track dried, the drivers progressively moved onto the intermediate tyre, with Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg the first to make the switch and immediately going quickest. More rain fell in the last half hour, meaning that nobody got the chance to run on the slicks in the afternoon.

With conditions never drying out fully, Williams driver Pastor Maldonado set the fastest time of 1:27.476 in free practice two on the intermediate tyre: more than 10 seconds slower than Button's time in the morning. The session was red-flagged with five minutes to go after Michael Schumacher went off in his Mercedes.

Conditions are expected still to be wet for qualifying tomorrow but the race on Sunday should be held in dry conditions, meaning that many drivers could be heading into the grand prix with very little dry running behind them at Hockenheim - particularly on the soft tyre.

Paul Hembery: "After the British Grand Prix, most people had seen enough rain but it was back! This morning was a very different situation to Silverstone though, with the track drying up rapidly between showers - it was not quite wet enough for the intermediate tyre - and there was some dry running as well. The afternoon was much wetter, but this very wide range of conditions allowed teams to assess the crossover point between slicks, intermediates and wets, which could be vital information for qualifying in particular. We have never competed at Hockenheim in Formula One before, so it was important to try and gain as much information as possible - particularly because we had three slick compounds running today for the first time this year. The variable conditions meant that the drivers were not able to draw many firm conclusions about the experimental tyre, but with more changeable weather expected tomorrow, this was far from being a wasted day in terms of information gathered".

Sets used overall:

New Hard 34
Medium 24
Intermediate 25
Wet 24

Highest number of laps per compound:

New Hard 22
Medium 30
Intermediate 18
Wet 15

Longest runs per compound:

New Hard 12 (Vergne)
Medium 11 (Vettel)
Intermediate 14 (Webber)
Wet 12 (Vergne)

Check out our Friday gallery, here.

Search

Search the PITPASS news
 
 

Widgets

Printer friendly page
Send to a friend
Discuss on the forum
Post to Facebook
Post to Twitter
RSS Feed
     

  Copyright © Pitpass 2002 - 2013. All rights reserved.

About | Advertise | Contact  | Copyright | Privacy & Security | RSS