TRACK CHARACTERISTICS
- There is no particular defining characteristic of Hockenheim, The lap is an interesting mix of corners and speeds, with some fast sections as well as the slower and more technical Motodrom stadium complex: a favourite for spectators.
- There have been no significant changes to the track or asphalt this year, which is medium in terms of energy loading and abrasiveness. Track evolution over the course of the weekend is generally quite low.
- Lateral and longitudinal demands are about equal over the course of the lap, which in theory means that it shouldn't be too hard to find the right set-up and get the tyres working optimally.
- The rain made the strategy almost impossible to predict last year. Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton won with a one-stop strategy (the only driver in the top six to stop just once) going from soft to ultrasoft. There was also a safety car, with Red Bull's Max Verstappen finishing fourth despite stopping three times. Historically, the safety car probability is around 50%.
- A new overall lap record was set last year by Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel in qualifying, but the fastest race lap record still dates back to 2004, courtesy of Kimi Raikkonen in a McLaren-Mercedes.
MARIO ISOLA - HEAD OF F1 AND CAR RACING
"Hockenheim is not a track that the
teams are historically completely familiar with; for many years it
alternated with the Nurburgring, then it dropped off the calendar
entirely, before returning last year. Nonetheless, there's nothing about
the track that is particular surprise, with the demands and forces on
the tyres being quite balanced. One exception is the Motodrom section,
which is a bit more stop-and-go, while another thing to be aware of is
the camber on Turn 12 and Turn 13. Wear and degradation is generally
low, so in the past we have seen some quite long stints on the tyres. As
we experienced last season though, the weather is hard to predict in
Hockenheim at this time of year and this could certainly be one key
element influencing strategy".
OTHER PIRELLI NEWS
- During the same weekend as the German Grand Prix, Pirelli's biggest motorsport event of the year takes place across the border in Belgium: the Spa 24 Hours, which is part of the Blancpain GT Series. To exclusively equip the 72 cars taking part this year (plus support championships) Pirelli brings around 13,000 tyres and more than 100 people.
- This week, before the German Grand Prix, Pirelli's test programme with the new 18-inch tyres for Formula 2 next year continues in Italy. Neither Formula 2 nor Formula 3 will be racing in Germany.
- Pirelli Hot Laps programme returns at the Hockenheimring, with Lamborghini having joined the roster of participating supercar manufacturers. Every new Lamborghini leaving the Sant'Agata factory in Italy does so on Pirelli tyres: an exclusive agreement that dates back to the 1960s.
- Of the top three teams, Red Bull's drivers are the only ones to make identical tyre choices: the Mercedes and Ferrari drivers have all picked something different, with Ferrari opting for the biggest quantity of soft tyres.
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