Categorized | Featured Stories, News

F1 2016: Chinese Gp Tyre Strategy

The 2016 Chinese grand prix delivered a plethora of tyre strategies as the drivers made their way through the 56 laps.

The compounds on offer for the race were the red-walled supersoft, yellow-walled soft, and the white-walled medium. It was evident from the long runs in Free Practice that the supersoft tyre would be the least desirable race tyre. Instead the soft tyre was the obvious choice to run the majority of the laps on.

Eventual pole-sitter Nico Rosberg set his fastest Q2 time on the soft tyre and ensured that he would start on the more durable tyre. However, this advantage was diminished with the safety-car deployment on lap four. It allowed drivers starting on the supersoft tyre a free pitstop to swop the fragile tyre for the more fancied soft compound.

Mercedes ensured that Lewis Hamilton wouldn’t have to race the supersoft tyre by fitting the supersoft under the safety car and calling him straight back in to fit the soft tyre. Several drivers tried an elongated middle stint on the medium tyre but only Kimi Raikkonen was able to show a truly competitive pace on the white-walled compound. The Finn completed twenty-three laps on the medium compound and held off Lewis Hamilton who was on a set of softs.

Sebastian Vettel made the supersoft tyre work for him with a thirteen lap stint on the tyre. It allowed the Ferrari driver to scythe through the field and eventually recover to second place after twice sustaining front-wing damage.

Nico Rosberg stayed as far away from the supersofts as he could and ran a soft>soft>medium two stop race. Lewis Hamilton completed the most pitstops of the day with five visits to the pitlane.

03-Chinese-Race1-4k-EN

About Natalie Le Clue

Natalie Le Clue is an F1 aficionado of the most dedicated vein. And, true to form for any F1-enamoured junkie, she readily admits to crying the first time she saw a F1 car, calling it an ‘overwhelming moment’. Natalie has won the 2010 gSport Woman In Media award, the 2015 Woman In Media Print award, and has been named as one of the Top 100 Most Influential People in South African Sport by the Department of Sport and Recreation. Natalie is currently serving as SAfm's F1 correspondent. Follow Natalie on Twitter @nlc27

Leave a Reply

twitter-2   facebook   rss 

Countdown to Next Race

weeks
-8
-8
days
0
0
hours
0
-8
minutes
-2
-8
seconds
-3
0

Twitter

Facebook