Zynerji wrote: ↑17 Sep 2021, 03:41
I think each team should build their own tyres, and partner with a tyre manufacturer. Kind of how fuel and oil suppliers work, except the teams control their own tyre nuance through construction.
Couple tyre molds, small staff, manufacturer does all the r&d and safety design.
One word: testing.
No one is going to be able to develop tyres without it. So we're either in the realms of mule cars or we allow in-season testing.
Back when it was Bridgestone vs Michelin, Bridgestone and Ferrari would test every week, deciding on the tyre for the next race. Minardi got the left overs that Ferrari didn't want. The occasional Minardi good results were down to them getting lucky with the left overs.
The change to the rules requiring no tyre changes is what ended the Ferrari stranglehold on the championship - Bridgestone couldn't make a fast tyre that lasted: it was one or the other. Michelin's tyres were better at this compromise. Result was two titles for Alonso. Without that tyre rule change, Schumacher would probably have had 8 or 9 titles!
Tyres are too important to a car's performance to be just devised in an office, made and then raced without a lot of testing. Look at Pirelli's problems before they got the additional tyre testing agreement from the FIA.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.