14
November
2015
|
19:51
Europe/Amsterdam

2015 Brazilian Grand Prix - Qualifying

NICO ROSBERG SEALS POLE POSITION AT INTERLAGOS ON P ZERO YELLOW SOFT TYRE, TO EXTEND HIS POLE RUN

BETWEEN TWO AND THREE PIT STOPS EXPECTED: MEDIUM TYRE EXPECTED TO BE MAIN RACE TYRE

TYRE WEAR AND DEGRADATION REMAINS WITHIN EXPECTATIONS ON CHALLENGING INTERLAGOS CIRCUIT

Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg has set pole for the Brazilian Grand Prix using the Pirelli P Zero Yellow soft tyre, nominated together with the P Zero White medium this weekend. With just over a second separating the two compounds, a number of different strategies are possible for the race tomorrow. Many competitors are expected to stop twice, but a three-stopper is also very possible. With only a small percentage probability of rain at the start of qualifying, the track remained dry throughout all three sessions. Dry weather should be the case for tomorrow’s race as well, with the short lap and heavy traffic around Interlagos making strategy all the more important when it comes to gaining track position. Just a tenth of a second separated the two Mercedes drivers in this morning’s final free practice session and their battle continued throughout qualifying. All the drivers completed Q1 on the soft tyre (with all but two of them having run a set of mediums at the start of the session). Qualifying then continued using only the soft compound, as the drivers prioritised saving the more durable medium for the race. Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) and Romain Grosjean (Lotus) did not use any medium tyres during the qualifying session at all. Lap times were generally slower than they had been in the equivalent sessions last year, mostly due to the new kerbs at Interlagos, which are much higher than they used to be and do not allow the drivers to go over them. Track temperatures peaked at 50 degrees centigrade for the all-important top 10 shoot out: the hottest seen all weekend. Most drivers completed two runs in Q3, using a set of fresh soft tyres for the final run that decided pole – which went to Rosberg for the fifth consecutive time. Paul Hembery, Pirelli motorsport director: “Although Interlagos takes a lot out of the tyres, which is why we’re expecting two or three stops tomorrow, the wear and degradation levels are where we would expect them to be at during this stage of the weekend. The biggest factor in the lap time has appeared to be the new layout with the kerbs, which the drivers have had to get used to since they experienced them for the first time yesterday. Track temperatures have been warm, but still nothing like the very hot conditions we found last year in qualifying. With quite a clear performance gap between the two compounds and dry weather, we’re set for a few different strategy options tomorrow, which the teams will be calculating carefully tonight.” The Pirelli strategy predictor: With wear and degradation levels lower than one year ago on this circuit, two different two-stop strategies are theoretically the quickest options for the 71-lap race tomorrow, although a three-stop is possible as well, depending on factors such as traffic and track position. A three-stopper would be: start on the soft tyre and then change to soft again on laps 15 and 30, before moving to mediums on lap 46 to the end. The two quickest two-stoppers are: start on soft, change to medium on lap 17, medium again on lap 44. Alternatively: start on medium, change to soft on lap 27 and then medium on lap 44. The time difference between these three strategies is minimal.

Fastest compounds in FP3:
1Hamilton1m12.070sSoft new
2Rosberg1m12.193sSoft new
3Vettel1m12.760sSoft new
Top 10 tyre use:
Rosberg1m11.282sSoft new 
Hamilton1m11.360sSoft new 
Vettel1m11.804sSoft new 
Bottas1m12.085sSoft new 
Raikkonen1m12.144sSoft new 
Hulkemberg1m12.265sSoft new 
Kvyat1m12.322sSoft new 
Massa1m12.415sSoft new 
Ricciardo1m12.417sSoft new 
Verstappen1m12.739sSoft new