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2020 Tuscan Grand Prix – Preview

2020 Italian Grand Prix, Friday - LAT Images

Formula One heads to a brand-new track for Round 9 of the 2020 season: the Mugello Circuit in Italy

  • Toto Talks Tuscany
  • How do F1 teams prepare for a new race?
  • Stat Attack: Tuscany and Beyond

Toto Talks Tuscany

Monza was a highly entertaining race; well done to Pierre, Carlos, Lance and their teams for well-deserved podiums and points. We clearly didn’t get the result we were hoping for, but we still managed to increase the gap to our direct competitors, so we can look back at the Italian Grand Prix and appreciate that it was a real victory for our sport.

The next stop takes us to the beautiful Tuscan countryside and I’m excited to see what the first new track this year holds for us. Mugello is a challenging high-speed circuit with absolutely no slow corners, which will be demanding on drivers and tyres. There are a number of new races this year and it’s all about trying to prepare for them as well as possible – the rate of learning and adaptability will be the key to opportunities on track.

The Tuscan Grand Prix will also be the 1000th F1 race for Ferrari, marking the long racing tradition of this great Italian brand. We will honour this achievement with a Mercedes-AMG Safety Car in Ferrari red – our nod to a racing history that brought us some of the greatest moments in Formula One. The men and women of Maranello have a proud history to celebrate and we’re paying respect to those celebrations this weekend.

How do F1 teams prepare for a new race?

Most F1 teams last visited the Mugello circuit for a three-day test in May 2012. Since then, there were substantial changes to cars, engines and tyres as well as smaller changes to the track. That’s why teams will treat Mugello as a completely new circuit. They will have a similar approach to the third race in Italy this year at Imola, as well as the races in Portugal, Turkey and Germany and the second Bahrain race.

The first step in the preparation process for a new race is purchasing highly accurate Lidar maps. Those 3D maps don’t just reflect general layout features like track width or cornering gradients, but also important details like the configuration of the kerbs and details of the track surface. The maps are accurate enough to be used in the driver-in-loop (DiL) simulator where drivers find the optimal racing line around a lap. Both Lewis and Valtteri have driven the Mugello circuit in the team’s DiL simulator in Brackley.

The racing line obtained from the DiL then forms the basis of further simulation work in the automated simulator that the team uses to gain an understanding of the set-up direction of the car. Thanks to these highly accurate simulation tools, the engineers can do a lot of preparation work for a new circuit at the factory, allowing the track-side part of the operation to focus on tyre and strategy work rather than having to concentrate on set-up alone.

In preparation of a race weekend at a track that F1 visits regularly, teams will look at data from previous years to learn from past experiences. However, this data has a certain expiration date. For example, one of the aspects that the team tries to understand before heading to a race is the specific energy management and the deployment maps which the track layout requires. That renders data from before the hybrid era obsolete in preparation of a new race.

From a driver’s perspective, coming to a new track is a bit different though. While drivers can use the simulator to learn the layout of a track, they tend to find more lap time on a new track than they usually find over the course of a race weekend, as they experiment with brake points, racing lines and cornering speeds.

Mugello features an unusual track layout with a number of very fast corners as well as a complete absence of slow ones – even the “slowest” corner (Turn 1) is expected to be taken at an apex speed of around 140 kph. Mugello’s many fast turns and its fairly old, abrasive tarmac bear some resemblance to Suzuka and engineers use the venue of the Japanese Grand Prix as a reference point for their predictions about tyre life and degradation: both tracks generate a very high sliding energy and put a lot of stress on the tyres.

The section from Turn 6 to Turn 9 will be particularly demanding on the tyres. The four corners (the right-left combination of Casanova and Savelli followed by the two Arrabiata right-handers) are expected to be taken flat which will put very high loads on the tyres. This also presents a challenge for the set-up of the car as teams will try and find a solution that deals with the high sliding energy.

The high-speed, twisty character of the track as well as its fairly narrow width will make overtaking tricky in Mugello, placing a particular importance on qualifying. The best point for overtaking is predicted to be at the end of the long straight going into the “slow” Turn 1.

Stat Attack: Tuscany and Beyond

2020 Tuscan Grand Prix Timetable

Session   Local Time (CEST)   Brackley (BST)   Stuttgart (CEST)
Practice 1 (Friday)   11:00-12:30   10:00-11:30   11:00-12:30
Practice 2 (Friday)   15:00-16:30   14:00-15:30   15:00-16:30
Practice 3 (Saturday)   12:00-13:00   11:00-12:00   12:00-13:00
Qualifying (Saturday)   15:00-16:00   14:00-15:00   15:00-16:00
Race (Sunday)   15:10-17:10   14:10-16:10   15:10-17:10

Technical Stats – Season to Date (Barcelona Pre-Season Test 1 to Present)

    Laps Completed   Distance Covered (km)   Corners Taken   Gear Changes   PETRONAS Fuel Injections
Mercedes   3,310   16,627   48,432   130,181   132,400,000
Hamilton   1,662   8,341   24,339   65,449   66,480,000
Bottas   1,648   8,286   24,093   64,732   65,920,000
MB Power   9,249   69,364   135,312   363,514   369,960,000

Mercedes-Benz in Formula One

    Starts   Wins   Podium Places   Poles   Front Row   Fastest Laps   1-2 Wins   Front Row Lockouts
Mercedes (All Time)   218   108   223   119   215   79   55   70
Mercedes (Since 2010)   206   99   206   111   195   70   50   68
Hamilton   258   89   157   94   152   50   N/A   N/A
Bottas   147   8   51   13   33   14   N/A   N/A
MB Power   488   194   492   202   395   174   86   107
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