Ah come on. 99% of the people having problems with the current rules is because the teams, driver and/or fan of those did not get the desired result. If the situation is reversed, by not letting tyres get changed under red, the same people will have the same problems if it again is not in favour of their (favourite) team/driver.organic wrote: ↑12 Nov 2024, 15:16The issue is that the current system encourages drivers to stay out on inappropriate tyres to benefit from changing under the inevitable red flag. But this itself raises the chance of causing crashes/red flags. There needs to be a change for safety reasonsmarcel171281 wrote: ↑12 Nov 2024, 14:52It is irrelevant whether changing tyres is allowed under red flags or not. Is just changes the one who benefit.
With the current rules, the ones staying out will benefit, as they have a free stop. If you don't allow tyre changes under red, the ones pitted before the red flag benefit the same way, as the ones that did not pit will either have to do that after the restart and fall back to (nearly) last place (dry race), or if they don't pit (wet race), are in front on way older tyres for the rest of the race.
Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. Either way, discussions will stay.
If you want to put in on safety, Pirelli should provide a decent alternative for the intermediates, don't blame it on these rules.
BTW, these rules are the same in dry conditions and then the same discussion always arrises, by disappointed teams and fans. Again, there is no ideal rule, sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. Indycar has the opposite rule (no pitting under SC/red) and there is also always discussion, because it sometime benefits some drivers and others not.