Podium Prophets
Round 3

Japanese Grand Prix

5.807 km53 laps307.8 km total

Mercedes currently leads the predicted order here with a 7.50 weekend score, 7.59 qualifying outlook, and 7.42 race outlook.

Legendary Esses through S1 demand supreme high-speed aero balance130R is one of the fastest corners in F1Figure-8 layout with elevation changes and aggressive kerbs
suzuka circuit layout

Circuit Demands

High-Speed Demand
9.0
Tyre Degradation Severity
9.0
Downforce Demand
8.5
Surface Grip
7.5
Kerb Severity
7.0
Overtaking Difficulty
7.0
Traction Demand
6.0
Energy Clipping Demand
5.8
Low-Speed Demand
4.5
Active Aero Value
4.5
Straight-Line Importance
4.5
Energy Recovery Opportunity
3.8
Braking Demand
3.5
Altitude Effect
0.5

Circuit Analysis

Suzuka's demand profile is defined by its extremes. High-speed and tyre degradation both score 9.0, the joint highest on the calendar, while downforce requirement reaches 8.5. The figure-8 layout means no sector offers meaningful recovery: the Esses demand full-commitment high-speed cornering in fourth and fifth gear, 130R loads the rear axle at sustained lateral G, and the Spoon-Degner sequence piles further thermal stress onto both front and rear tyres across consecutive corners.

A downforce score of 8.5 means low-drag setups carry a significant lap time penalty. Teams that sacrifice too much downforce chasing straight-line speed will be punished at the Esses and through the final chicane, where mechanical stability under braking matters. Qualifying position is important but not decisive; tyre management through the race frequently reshuffles the top five, and the cars with the cleanest high-speed aero platforms accumulate a compound advantage over each stint.

Team Outlook at This Circuit

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