19/03/2016
NEWS STORY
A new era of qualifying began today in Melbourne, with drivers being eliminated one-by-one. The new format gave everybody plenty to get used to, as drivers and teams worked out the best compromise between setting a quick time and managing the tyre allocation in order to maximise opportunities for the race. Lewis Hamilton's pole position time for Mercedes (the 50th of his career) was close to 2.5 seconds quicker than his pole last year and three-tenths off the pole record: a clear indication of the performance increase from the latest-generation cars.
Paul Hembery, Pirelli motorsport director: "More so than ever, today was all about learning and thinking on your feet. The teams headed into a brand new qualifying format with relatively little tyre data, as a result of the rain that limited running yesterday. More detailed work was done in the dry conditions of FP3 today, with some drivers only trying the supersoft compound for the first time. When it came to qualifying, the aim of the game hasn't fundamentally changed: it's still to get through the session using as few sets of tyres as possible. However, we already saw a number of different ways of achieving that goal, which will make for some interesting strategies tomorrow: especially for those outside the top eight, who will have a free choice of starting tyres."
How the tyres behaved:
Medium: Not used that much so far this weekend. It is one of the two mandatory sets in the race together with the soft.
Soft: The favoured race tyre: will generally be chosen for the longest stints tomorrow. Around 1.2s faster per lap than the medium
Supersoft: The only tyre used in qualifying, around 0.7s faster per lap than the soft
Check out our Saturday gallery, here.