MotoGP returns to the Brickyard24/08/2010
Bridgestone slick compounds available: Front: Medium, Hard. Rear: Hard, Extra Hard (Asymmetric)
The Brickyard plays host to the second American grand prix
of the season as MotoGP travels to Indianapolis,
five weeks after the last North American visit to Laguna Seca.
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway is a relatively new venue
for motorcycling’s premier class, with the inaugural event being held in only
2008, but it was a motorcycle race that provided the circuit’s first
competition proper back in 1909.
Since then much has changed, and again this year Bridgestone
will provide tyres to machines that will reach over 200mph around the 2.6 mile course.
Indianapolis is
one of the circuit’s at which Bridgestone has the largest breadth of tyre
information having been involved in MotoGP, Formula One and IndyCar competition
there over the years.
The track is formed of three distinct component parts; the famous
oval, the infield road circuit built for Formula One in 1999, and the complex
built specifically for MotoGP in 2007. This mix of parts presents the challenge
of different surface types each with differing levels of abrasion and grip,
making it tricky to attain a consistent balance and feeling throughout a lap.
Indianapolis’ asymmetric layout places much
higher demands on the left shoulders of the tyres as it is run anti-clockwise, in
the same direction as the circuit’s oval races.
There is a big difference in tyre temperature between each
shoulder of the rear tyres, so Bridgestone’s asymmetric rear slicks aim to
provide durability in the left shoulder by using the hard and extra hard
compound options alongside good warm-up performance in the right shoulders by
using soft compound rubber.
Indy is one of the four hardest circuits of the season for the
left shoulders of the rear tyres because of the number, length and speed of the
left-handers and the abrasiveness of the tarmac. It is on a par with Catalunya (although
here the greater stress is on the right shoulder), Sachsenring and Phillip Island.
Hiroshi Yamada, Manager,
Bridgestone Motorsport Department said:
“Indianapolis
is an historic place and one that we look forward to going back to, even if
just to marvel at the scale of it! In the middle of their centennial era
celebrations, I would like to say congratulations for this milestone and I’m
happy that we can be involved in marking the history of such a famous circuit. America is an important market for Bridgestone therefore
many people will visit Indianapolis during the
GP from Bridgestone USA
including some top management. We have a lot of experience at Indianapolis, even though only two years in
MotoGP, because of our past Formula One activities there and especially our
continuing IndyCar involvement through our Firestone brand.”
Tohru Ubukata, Manager, Bridgestone Motorcycle Tyre Development
Department said:
“Indianapolis is quite unique in that it
features three kinds of track surface during a lap, from the oval track to the Formula
One section and the MotoGP complex. The characteristics of these surfaces range
from grippy and abrasive to quite slippery, so the diversity of track
conditions makes it difficult for riders and tyres.
“The circuit is very hard on the left
side of the rear tyres, which require good
performance at high temperature and high wear resistance through the high speed
left corners especially around the section of oval banking. The right side by
contrast needs good warm-up performance to rapidly generate tyre temperature
and provide riders with a good consistent feeling through the fewer right-hand
corners. The rear tyres we have selected are the inverse of those we brought to
Catalunya; that is to say the same asymmetric compounds but with the harder
compound on the left side.”