28,600
In total there was 219. Here is number of races per season from 2003-2014. 2003 season had 16 races 2004 season had 18 races 2005 season had 19 races 2006 season had 18 races 2007 season had 17 races 2008 season had 18 races 2009 season had 17 races 2010 season had 19 races 2011 season had 19 races 2012 season had 20 races 2013 season had 19 races 2014 season had 19 races
19 there would actually be 20 but Bahrain was postponed.
The Car Coach - 2011 All-Season vs Winter Tires was released on: USA: 16 February 2012
There are multiple races held every year. The number has been steadily increasing over the past few years. There were 19 races in the 2010 season and 20 races in the 2011 season. The 2009 season had only 17 races. The number of tracks/races keeps changing every year.
Pirelli will supply the tyres to all teams throughout the 2011 F1 Season, replacing Bridgestone from the 2010 Season.
Probably 19 or the whole 2011 season.
10200
Yes, Michael Waltrip will race a very limited schedule in 2011. Currently, he started two races this season, the Daytona 500 and the Aaron's 499.
Bill Elliott ran five races in 2011.
Pirelli produced 4 different compounds of dry tires and 2 different wet tires. Each team got 11 sets of 2 different dry tire compounds, and 2 each of the wet compounds each weekend. Pirelli specified which compound had to be used for the race weekend. All told, they went through about 2,500 tires this season.
Each race is not less than 305kilometers. So we assume an average race is around 307km. There are around 17-18 races in a season, so the equetion is 307*17= 5219km a season which is 3240miles. Of course this is the distance covered during the races. (without the qualifying and practice laps)
The Car Coach - 2011 Winter Tires was released on: USA: 1 March 2011