Jersey Tom wrote:Why would they keep a majority of their factories tooled for 13" when they're doing larger stuff for ALMS?....
....Then again, just about all of that is unimportant for the end user. Likely best to treat it like a black box than try to figure out the specifics of how it works.
Well, most of my experience dealing with large manufacturers is with Boeing and Ford, but I can testify that neither of those 2 throw anything out, ever. Okay, Boeing occasionally sells off WWII era office equipment. Ford has hundreds, maybe thousands, of casting molds strewn around their factories, for crap they haven't made in decades. When I asked a guy about them once he said "Well, you never know, we might need one some day".
My personal dealings with the Dunlop guy were all centered around tire feedback. Raw performance didn't mean so much, as my "style" was to throw it in and assume I could sort it out later. And, ya, I did think of them as something of a black box. We tuned our own engines, and obviously did our own setups, but tires are hard to figure out. Mostly I'm interested in the subject because although I'm far too old to put it to any use now I'd still like to know why I could be as fast as I was and crash as much as I did.
G-rock: I still don't understand this entire concept. Look, I know that Cindy Crawford sells dresses simply by wearing them, but what moron actually thinks as she's buying the dress that it's going to make her look like Cindy Crawford?
Will stupid people base their purchases on Pirelli's F1 performance? Possibly. Does it matter? Not to me, I firmly believe stupid people should be allowed to handicap themselves whenever they choose.
For any given road vehicle there is sometimes a single best tire available, but more often 2 to 5 very good ones that are all pretty close. The balance of power changes every few years as mfg's come out with new designs and because they all have their own development cycles.
Liter class sportbike tires are a VERY hotly contested catagory right now. Lots of mfg's are in the middle of what could reasonably be called a tire war. This is great news overall for the owners, but who should you buy? Should you buy Pirelli because they are the sole supplier of WSB (2 wheeled nascar) and make a very good product? Bridgestone because they are the sole supplier of Moto GP (2 wheeled F1)? Should you rule out Michelin just because they got kicked out of Moto GP? How about Continental, makers of very good road tires but not particularly big on racing? Should you perhaps do your research, find out which tire at the moment has the best price/performance/lifespan ratio? Should you perhaps honestly apraise your own abilities and see if you could actually make any use of that tiny extra performance anyway?
Building a dress that looks great on Cindy Crawford has very little to do with building a dress that looks great on your mom. Building a great, or a not so great, race tire has little to do with building a great road tire.