News On F1 - Formula 1 News, Results, Information and Statistics

Formula 1 Store
F1 Tickets, Tours, Gear
F1 Books
& Biographies

Formula 1 News - April 2005
Michelin

F1 Merchandise
Main Page
Formula 1 News
2009 F1 Schedule
2009 F1 Line-up
2008 F1 Schedule & Results
2008 F1 Line-up
F1 Team Reports
F1 Teams
F1 Drivers
8 'n' Pole
Register - Submit
F1 Regulations
The Forums
Live F1 Coverage
Motorsport Shop
Motorsport Calendar
F1 Merchandise
UK
- USA
F1 Tours
F1 Tickets
F1 Diecast
F1 Videos
F1 Games
F1 Trivia
Past Formula 1 Seasons
2007 F1 Results
2006 F1 Results
2005 F1 Results
2004 F1 Results
2003 F1 Results

2002 F1 Results

2001 F1 Results

2000 F1 Results

1999 F1 Results

1998 F1 Results

1997 F1 Results
Links
Translate
Search
Contact Us
About
Archives
Your Say
Diagnosis & Prognosis
By the Heretic
Controversy Corner
The Real Race
By the Quali-flyer
F1 Testing
2006 World Cup

2005 FIA Formula One World Championship
Round 5: Spanish Grand Prix (Circuito de Catalunya), May 6-8

30 April: New Surface, Same Intense Groundwork

Formula One is poised for one of its most highly-charged weekends of the season, as local favourite Fernando Alonso (Mild Seven Renault/Michelin) bids to extend his world championship lead on home soil at the Circuit de Catalunya. Unbeaten for the past three races, Alonso is aiming to become the first Spaniard to win his home grand prix.

So far this year, six Michelin drivers from five of the company’s seven partner teams have shared 10 of a possible 12 podium finishes – and Alonso has yet to finish outside the top three. Race tickets sold out well in advance and a capacity crowd of about 125,000 is expected on Sunday.

This weekend’s event will be the 35th Spanish Grand Prix to count towards the F1 world championship. The country first appeared on the calendar in 1951, with a street race in Pedralbes, Barcelona that was repeated in 1954. The race has since been staged at Jarama (nine races, between 1968 and 1981), Montjuich Park (also in Barcelona – four, 1969-1975) and Jerez (five, 1986-1990) before it moved to its present home in 1991. This will be the 15th F1 race at the Circuit de Catalunya.

Jarno Trulli was the best-placed Michelin runner in last year’s corresponding fixture, when he took his Renault to third place, fractionally ahead of team-mate Alonso.

This weekend the company is seeking its 80th F1 world championship success – but only its second in Spain.

The first was one of the most memorable in F1 history, however: in 1981, Gilles Villeneuve (Ferrari/Michelin) fended off fierce pressure. Villeneuve beat Jacques Laffite (Ligier/Michelin) by 0.211s – 0.004s tighter than Fernando Alonso’s winning margin in the recent San Marino GP.

Pierre Dupasquier, Michelin motorsport director
“We will be dealing with some new characteristics at the Circuit de Catalunya this year, because it has been totally resurfaced. We completed lots of test laps here during the winter and found the asphalt much less abrasive than it used to be. We also evaluated a number of new ideas on this circuit and have developed a softer range of compounds than we were accustomed to using in the past.”
“Although the surface has been modified, the track configuration means there is no change to the mechanically-induced loads the rubber must endure – and these are considerable. There are several long, fast corners that put a significant strain on tyres.”
“In addition, engineers run cars with a relatively high degree of downforce. Although this helps the tyres to generate more grip, it increases the demands imposed on the sidewalls through the higher-speed corners.”
“Last but not least, fuel loads are more influential here than at many other circuits – every 10kg equates to about 0.4s per lap.”

Driver perspective:
Fernando Alonso
, Mild Seven Renault F1 Team
“Barcelona has traditionally been a tough circuit for tyres. Even though it has been resurfaced, I think it might be one of the first tracks where wear rates are a big concern for engineers, because the long, fast corners could make it very hard on tyres – especially the fronts.”
“From our perspective, though, we are very confident: Renault and Michelin have won four races out of four this season and, historically, we have always been quick in Spain. Everything is still there to fight for and I know the atmosphere will be fantastic – like a big party for all three days. That will be an even stronger motivation for me to fight for the podium.”

Technical focus
How track surface conditions affect grip Grip implies contact between two surfaces. On a racing circuit, the first of these is the tyre compound and the second is the track. The level of available grip will be determined by the nature of the track surface and its state of repair, plus its abrasiveness and the possible presence of rain.

To produce grip, a tyre needs a partner – the track surface – to stimulate the mechanisms that generate grip: a tyre’s ability to mould itself to surface imperfections and molecular adhesion.

Michelin refers to a tyre’s ability to adapt to variable road surface – when small surface imperfections dig into the tread – as “indentation”. Molecular adhesion necessitates direct contact between the rubber and the track surface, so conditions must be dry.

If water is present, it can be dispersed in two ways: 

  • drainage (through camber, natural gradients or surface porosity)
  • storage (where water settles in ‘valleys’ below the level of any surface ripples).

Indentation can only occur when a track surface is reasonably abrasive – ie when it has a number of imperfections that will superficially impact on the tyre tread.

To determine the nature of the “indenters”, you need to measure the proportion of tread that is actually in direct contact with the track when compressed on its surface.

One method involves taking an imprint of the contact between the tread and the track. In the case of an F1 tyre, that figure rises to 30-70%.

Graphic: Measurement of the load bearing surface

The marking on the sheet of paper indicates the amount of load bearing surface for a given rubber

2005 Spanish Grand Prix - Main Page
2005 Spanish Grand Prix - Team and Driver Preview Page

Latest Formula 1 News from Michelin:

Michelin to withdraw from Formula 1 at the end of 2006 (14/12/2005)
2006 F1 Regulations (28/10/2005)
Pierre Dupasquier – architect of 1300 wins and 180 world titles (16/10/2005)
Michelin confirms F1 Title Double (16/10/2005)
Michelin takes World Championship Double (28/09/2005)
Alonso secures Formula One World Title with Michelin (26/09/2005)
Belgium - Race (11/09/2005)
The Formula 1 regulations applicable in 2008 (11/09/2005)
Belgium - Qualifying (10/09/2005)

More news from Michelin

Back To Top


Google
 
Web NewsOnF1.com
NewsOnF1.net (Forum)

2009 Australian F1 Grand Prix
also Accommodation packages
F1 Tickets
2009 Malaysian F1 Grand Prix
2009 Bahrain F1 Grand Prix
2009 Spanish F1 Grand Prix
2009 Monaco F1 Grand Prix
2009 British F1 Grand Prix
2009 Belgian F1 GP
2009 Abu Dhabi F1 GP
MotoGP Tickets
more Motorsport Tours & Holidays
2009 Clipsal 500 package (Adelaide)

F1 Merchandise US

F1 Merchandise UK

Motorsport Magazines

Formula 1 Books

Race Driving Books

Race Car Design Books


Ayrton Senna

Past Formula 1 Drivers