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From simulator to stopwatch: The creative evidence teams have used to dispute F1 race results

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Austrian GP
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FIA confirms 2027 F1 power unit changes

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FIA confirms 2027 F1 power unit changes

Aprilia faces its biggest challenge right now – and Marquez is just one part of it

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How Formula E’s F1-like calendar sees the two series converging – but also diverging

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FIA announces Rally2 car upgrade kit to increase competition for WRC 2027

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Brands Hatch to make Formula E debut on expanded Gen4 calendar

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Waberski and Martin enjoy British GT's Spa day

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The challenge ahead of F1's future engineering hopefuls

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Monaco preview quotes: Bridgestone

Kees van de Grint, Bridgestone Motorsport Head of Track Engineering Operations - conducted and provided by the Bridgestone Motorsport Press Office

Q: What are the challenges of the Monte Carlo circuit?

KvdG: "You need as much grip as possible and teams will run their cars with a maximum downforce set-up. Rear traction is crucial with acceleration out of so many corners, but you have to be careful as understeer is not desirable with so much Armco about.

"There is a very high demand on the tyres as they are very soft. We have also worked on minimising the wear rate as we want to allow the teams flexibility with their strategies."

Q: What were the conclusions from testing the soft and super soft tyres in Paul Ricard?

KvdG: "We conducted the first two days of the Paul Ricard test on the soft and super soft compounds on the shorter configuration circuit. The soft compound Bridgestone Potenza was spot on for the Paul Ricard venue while the super soft had higher grip but more graining.

"Paul Ricard is not Monaco but from the data we think that the super soft will perform better there. Of course, we won't know this for sure until we're actually in Monte Carlo."

 

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