Pirelli said in an interview they prefer 18 inch.Jersey Tom wrote:Huge scam or dumb idea either way.
Mario Isola, Pirelli wrote:Q. The teams seem to be quite reluctant to jump straight away to 18-inch tyres for next season, because of the costs that will entail - so there is talk of perhaps a transition period. Is that something Pirelli would be open to?
MI: It is an option. I know the teams would prefer to stay on 13-inch tyres, at least in order to have a period top be able to develop the car to the 18-inch tyre. It is a big change and I can imagine they would have to work a lot on the mechanical aspects of the car. The 18-inch tyre is much more interesting for us because it is very close to a road tyre, compared to the 13-inch tyre which nobody uses at the moment.
The 18-inch tyre may be used a lot in magic wondersupercarsland there, but here in the curel real world (South America) 90% of the cars have 14 or 15 inch tyres and smaller cars still use 13-inch.Mario Isola, Pirelli wrote:Q. The teams seem to be quite reluctant to jump straight away to 18-inch tyres for next season, because of the costs that will entail - so there is talk of perhaps a transition period. Is that something Pirelli would be open to?
MI: It is an option. I know the teams would prefer to stay on 13-inch tyres, at least in order to have a period top be able to develop the car to the 18-inch tyre. It is a big change and I can imagine they would have to work a lot on the mechanical aspects of the car. The 18-inch tyre is much more interesting for us because it is very close to a road tyre, compared to the 13-inch tyre which nobody uses at the moment.
Standing ovation to you sir: =D> =D>Jersey Tom wrote: A large portion of the world uses 13-15" tires on consumer vehicles. Expensive sportscars on 18, 19, and 20" wheels are a tiny sliver of the market (though they do get a lot of attention). Of course, that's not particularly important anyway since there's absolutely no f'ing reason that race cars have to be remotely similar to road cars. Beyond that, there's absolutely nothing more "high tech" or "advanced" about an 18" tire compared to 15" or 13".
What?!?!? Really? This happened? In a technical forum? Geez...how the mighty have fallen...WhiteBlue wrote:The poll here on F1technical also showed that the forumers preferred the bigger wheels for the cooler design they provide.
Total BS. Tire "properties" will be no less involved or complicated.WhiteBlue wrote:The inertial moment would be significantly higher like at least 50% more. But the suspension would be much more controlled because the properties of the wheel/tyre would be much simpler.
No more so than any other tire on earth.WhiteBlue wrote:Today's tyres are almost impossible to understand/model for the engineers.
18" is the wheel diameter.xpensive wrote:Can anyone say for certain that 18" will not change total wheel diameter?
I have been told on another thread that I invented it so I am saying it is a metal 'wheel' and it has only been suggested that it will be 18 inches inches in diameter.Jersey Tom wrote:Wheels are metal. Tires are rubber. As for the TIRE diameter, not sure how much they'll change it.
we covered that subject already in the 18 inch thread:xpensive wrote:Can anyone say for certain that 18" will not change total wheel diameter?
Wheel rim diameter would be 25.4 mm x 18= 458 mmWhiteBlue wrote:My understanding is that tyre diameter would not change from the current dimensions, which is 660 mm for dry and 670 mm for wet tyres. Rim diameter is currently:xpensive wrote:Can anyone xplain how much the total wheel diameter would xpand with 18" rims?
- the tyre mounting widths are 12” (304.8mm +/-0.5mm) front; 13.7” (348.0mm +/-0.5mm) rear
- the wheel lip thickness is 9mm (+/-1mm)
- the outer lip diameter is 358mm (+/-1mm)