RB wasn't for sure, I always watch the Verstappen onboard during races, it was scraping like mad on the ground.
The heat treatment of the tyres is strictly regulated. Would be slam dunk disqualification.Henk_v wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 20:30If I let my speculation run totally wild;
End of last year teams found out that if you drive long enough on a tire, it comes back alive.
Any rubber needs to be vulcanised. Rubber is like chewing gum and needs to be heat treated to become rubber. The issue with any rubber product is that the core always heats up later in the tire mould. The surface is alway slightly overcooked and the inside a bit undercooked. There are many ways this can be minimised, especially in the formulation of the rubber recipe.
Adding to that challenge, many different compounds are used. Each needs to be formulated to need exactly the same vulcanisation parameters to make sure all parts are equally vulcanised.
One technique is post curing. The slightly undercooked rubber is heat treated at just below the vulcanisation temperature for some time to acheive uniform vulcanisation.
What if they discovered that keeping the tires for a long time in really hot blankets improved the tires and they just did that overnight, cooling them back before the race?
They were trying in FP .... there's in car from GR following KA and giving running commentary about floor strike severity. Assuming they lifted it for Q & race running.
Russell also reported bouncing on his own carFarnborough wrote: ↑19 May 2025, 20:56They were trying in FP .... there's in car from GR following KA and giving running commentary about floor strike severity. Assuming they lifted it for Q & race running.
Great plume of plank dust exit to rear diffuser expansion, that seemed mostly toward v-max from my recall.
Full article https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/fia- ... en-battle/The first TD relates to the measurement of skid block materials and the way that some teams had found clever ways to pass the probe tests that measure the depth of the plank after the race.
The TD clarified the type of materials that can be used in the area of the skids, plus how they could be mounted, in a bid to stop teams trying to find ways to run closer to the limit but still pass the minimum depth test.
Any team that had been exploiting this area in the past to help run their car lower to the ground would have had to lift it up for the Imola race.
A second TD did not change any of the FIA's interpretations of regulations but was instead the publication of a communication between the governing body and Red Bull relating to some questions about devices that could potentially be allowed to help with tyre cooling.
It is understood that the FIA made clear that a host of design ideas relating to the use of water cooling of wheel assemblies and tyres, plus other systems, would not be allowed.
This type of dialogue between teams and the governing body, where ideas are suggested only to be ruled out, is commonly used to smoke out concepts that rivals could be running to exploit grey areas of the regulations.
With the FIA publishing to all teams its guidance to Red Bull on what it felt would not be allowed, this would rule out any of its competitors being able to continue running anything covered in these documents.