Lewis Hamilton set the pace from team-mate Valtteri Bottas as Mercedes dominated Friday practice at the Spanish Grand Prix.
Hamilton was 0.287secs up on Bottas in the second session after Bottas topped the first by 0.039secs. Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was 0.821secs off in third.
Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo was fourth fastest, ahead of the surprising Haas of Romain Grosjean in fifth.
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was sixth and McLaren’s Carlos Sainz seventh.
The Racing Point of Sergio Perez, returning after a two-race absence because he contracted coronavirus, was eighth fastest, from Renault’s Esteban Ocon and Alpha Tauri’s Pierre Gasly.
Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel, who has a new chassis this weekend after a crack was discovered in his old one after the last race at Silverstone, was 12th, 0.3secs behind Leclerc.
And Red Bull’s Alex Albon was 0.8secs off team-mate Verstappen in 13th.
Lando Norris was 14th in the second McLaren and George Russell, who missed the first session while Williams development driver Roy Nissany drove his car, slowest of all, complaining of a lack of front grip.
Apart from Bottas running wide during his race-simulation run later in the session, it was an uneventful afternoon.
And there was no obvious sign of the extreme tyre wear that led to Mercedes being beaten by Verstappen at the last race at Silverstone, despite the high temperatures at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya.
Hamilton said: “It is quite tough out there. It is the hottest I have experienced in Spain – normally we come here in February and May. It’s beautiful weather but it’s a killer in the car.
“It has been a good day. The second session was better for me and the long runs we looked very close with the Red Bulls so I think it will be a close race.
“The tyres are not happy in these conditions. I didn’t see any blistering but we didn’t see any blistering last Friday either.
“It felt OK but the long run didn’t look too bad. I don’t know how much further we could go or how much further Red Bull could go compared to us and that will determine whether it’s one- or two-stop.”
Grosjean’s performance was the most unexpected, as the Haas has been struggling towards the back so far this year.
Grosjean’s session ended a few minutes early when he suffered a loss of power.