Hamilton says tyre rules deprive F1 fans

Formula One teams should be allowed more tyres for the Chinese Grand Prix, according to English driver Lewis Hamilton.

Lewis Hamilton said Formula One teams should be allowed more tyres on Saturday after restrictions prompted some drivers to sit out final practice for the Chinese Grand Prix, meaning a raw deal for fans.

Hamilton claimed a British-record 34th pole position and he did it without going out for a meaningful lap in final practice on Saturday morning as the rain teemed down in Shanghai.

With FIA regulations only allowing four sets of intermediate tyres and three of full wets for a race weekend, many teams opted to save them so they could have a fresh set for each of the three qualifying stints later.

That left fans who had paid RMB900-3700 ($A156,000) for a grandstand seat for the weekend looking at an empty track for much of free practice.

Hamilton said maybe the rules should be changed.

"Yeah, I mean, we all had to save our tyres," he said in the post-qualifying media conference. "I don't think it's great for the fans that we don't have a huge amount of tyres."

With a dry race forecast on Sunday, teams took the gamble of cashing all their wet weather tyres in qualifying on a track described by Hamilton's teammate Nico Rosberg as a "tyre killer" because of its extended spiralling bends taken under braking after high-speed straights.

Hamilton, second in the standings behind Rosberg after three races, thought the rules could be re-examined so drivers could at least "go out and run so they (fans) can see us driving.

"I'm sure people are tuning in and turning up to the track to watch us drive and we're kind of a little bit restricted, obviously with the engine mileage and also with the tyres.

"It would be cool if we had a little bit more tyre-life - then we would do some more running."


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2 min read
Published 19 April 2014 8:38pm
Updated 19 April 2014 8:42pm
Source: AAP

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