Total number of tyres provided for the season (dry and wets): Race tyres: 24,000 dry tyres; 4,600 wet tyres plus an additional 6,000 for the tests
Total numbers of tyres used: Dry tyres: 21,100; wet tyres: 2,900
Total kilogrammes of rubber deposited on track in 2011: 10,200
Number of tyres recycled during 2011: All, i.e. 28,600 race tyres plus 6,000 test tyres
Average life span of a dry compound this season: 120 km
Tracks and Races
Tracks which puts the most energy into a tyre per km (lateral, braking, traction, etc.): Barcelona and Suzuka
Track which puts the least energy into a tyre per km (lateral, braking, traction, etc.): Monza
Longest continuous energy input into a tyre: Istanbul (Turn 8 )
Track with the ‘easiest’ corners in terms of tyres: Montréal
Longest race of the year: Montréal with 4hrs 04min 39.537s
Shortest races of the year: Monza with 1hrs 20min 46.272s
Pole position lap records broken: 11
Race lap records broken: 2
Most laps led on Pirelli tyres: 739 (Sebastian Vettel)
Highest speed reached by a P Zero F1 tyre: 349.2 kph (Sergio Perez in Monza Qualifying)
Pit stops
Total number of pit stops for the year: 1111 (really! – of which 22 were a Drive Through and 4 a stop-go penalty)
Total average number of stops per race: 58.4, i.e. 2.25 per driver
Most pit stops in a race: Hungary (88 – of which 3 were a Drive Through)
Least pit stops in a race: Italy (35)
Fastest pit stop time: 2.82 seconds (Mercedes GP, Chinese Grand Prix)
Overtaking
Number of overtaking manoeuvres (most in World Championship history): 1120 (after Abu Dhabi)
Most overtaking manoeuvres in a dry race (= most ever): 126 at the 2011 Turkish Grand Prix
Most overtaking manoeuvres in a wet race (= most ever): 125 at the 2011 Canadian Grand Prix
Other interesting numbers
Total number of F1 drivers to have driven on P Zero compounds: 57 (including third drivers and young drivers)
Oldest driver to have driven a P Zero F1 tyre: Martin Brundle (51 years old)
Youngest driver to have driven a P Zero F1 tyre: Kevin Ceccon (18 years old)
Total kilometres driven by all the P Zero compounds in 2011: 307,657 km (races and tests)
Coldest track/ground temperatures Pirelli P Zero tyres have run: German Grand Prix at 13 degrees Celsius; coldest overall: Valencia winter testing at 6 degrees
Hottest track/ground temperatures Pirelli P Zero tyres have run: Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at 43 degrees Celsius; hottest overall: Abu Dhabi Young Driver Test 49 degrees Celsius
Total weight of tyres each fitter handles during a season: 16,389 kgs
Average time taken for a Pirelli fitter to fit an F1 tyre from scratch: 2m30s
Time taken for Sebastian Vettel to fit an F1 tyre from scratch: 5m13s
Discussion
No comments for “2011 Pirelli Formula One Statistics”
Post a comment