Silverstone is fast and susceptible to cold weather making it one of the most challenging circuits on the calendar in terms of tyre development.
The high-speed sections of the circuit require good tyre stability for cornering and braking, while the generally chilly conditions make excellent warm-up performance a necessity.
- Bridgestone slick compounds available: Front: Soft, Medium. Rear: Medium-Soft, Medium (Asymmetric)
- Bridgestone wet tyre compounds available: Soft (Main), Hard (Alternative)
Having analysed tyre data from the last two races at Silverstone, Bridgestone has revised the compounds in its asymmetric rear tyres for this weekend. The two slick rear tyres offered will be the medium-soft and medium options, with both tyres featuring the same medium rubber compound on the right shoulder combined with a choice of either the extra-soft or soft rubber on the left shoulder of the tyre. This change has been made to enhance rider safety by ensuring the rear tyre stays in its ideal temperature range over the course of a lap.
Bridgestone’s new specification front slick tyre, which was first introduced at Jerez, becomes the standard front offering from Silverstone onwards and will now comprise each rider’s full allocation of nine front slick tyres for a race weekend. For this race, the front slicks will be available in the soft and medium compounds to ensure the best initial grip and feel in the expected cool conditions.
Hiroshi Yamada – Manager, Bridgestone Motorsport Department
“I am happy to be visiting Silverstone once again as the circuit is fast and technical, the facilities are excellent and the British fans are always very passionate. With Cal Crutchlow doing so well this season I expect even greater home support and as we had very wet conditions at Silverstone last year, I hope we get fine weather this weekend and get to enjoy yet another exciting race!
“This race is always a challenge for tyres with its high speeds and cold conditions and so we have undertaken considerable tyre development leading up to this year’s British Grand Prix. The new specification front slick tyre becomes the standard front offering from this round onwards and at Silverstone will be available in the soft and medium compounds, while we have also revised the composition of our asymmetric rear slick tyres for this race compared to previous years. Both these developments are prime examples of Bridgestone’s commitment to constantly exploring ways to improve rider safety.”
Shinji Aoki – Manager, Bridgestone Motorsport Tyre Development Department
“Silverstone presents a balancing act when it comes to tyre development. On the one hand the fast sections like Maggotts and Becketts place high lateral loads on tyres and the heavy braking at the end of the Hangar Straight generates considerable stress on the centre section of the front tyre requiring good tyre stability, while the low average track temperature at Silverstone means superior warm-up performance is also important.
“Our data analysis shows that our soft and medium rubber compounds provide the necessary braking stability and warm-up characteristics needed at Silverstone and so they form the basis of our tyre choices at this circuit. For this year we have revised the composition of our asymmetric rear slicks and will offer the medium-soft and medium options. Both these slicks feature the same medium rubber compound on the right side to provide the necessary durability for the numerous right-hand turns, combined with either the extra-soft or soft rubber on the left shoulder to ensure sufficient temperature retention throughout a whole lap.”
source: bridgestonemotorsport.com, bsmotorsport.com
PREVIEW TO THE BRITISH GRAND PRIX (15-17 June, Silverstone)
MAHINDRA AIMING TO MAKE A SPLASH AT LEGENDARY SILVERSTONE
This weekend’s British GP, home race for Mahindra rider Danny Webb, promises plenty of traditional British weather. And if predictions of rain come true, it could play into the 21-year-old Englishman’s hands.
Team-mate Marcel Schrötter is also an accomplished wet-weather rider, and while neither hopes for rain, they have the reassurance of the excellent handling of the Mahindra MGP-30 and the new second-generation engine to help them make the most of whatever comes.
Last year’s Silverstone race was run in atrocious conditions, but was one of the best for the Mahindra pair, then riding 125cc two-strokes. Danny Webb splashed round to 11th; while Marcel, with three laps to go, had been running three places ahead of his team-mate when he joined a long list of crash victims.
This year, Webb and Schrötter ride an independently made 250cc four-stroke in the all-new replacement class, Moto3™. The unique Mahindra design is challenging a 30-strong grid of production racers from established racing manufacturers, giving the Indian company a priceless chance to develop its own technology in the white heat of international competition.
Silverstone is the longest and one of the fastest circuits of the year, and a classic British GP venue, first used in 1976. This is the sixth of 17 Moto3 rounds, preceding a run of three in a row as the European season gathers momentum. Unusually, the Moto3 race is last of the day, starting at 14:30 British Summer Time and run over 17 laps of the modern 3.667-mile (5.902-km) circuit.
DANNY WEBB
With the new engine parts at Catalunya I had a good race, fighting other factory bikes, until I had a small mishap when another rider pushed me off, as can happen. We definitely have some positives to take to Silverstone. Rain would give me a chance of a good result, but I hope it will be dry. We need dry track time to continue developing this new bike.
MARCEL SCHRÖTTER
Silverstone is a difficult and interesting track. I’m looking forward to it. We don’t expect more new parts there, but we had a better weekend in Catalunya and you can see we are getting faster, me and the bike working together. It’s important to aim for a top-ten finish as development continues.
source: mahindraracing.com, mahindra.com