Did you hear that? A system, that heats the tyres only at the start procedere should have caused Vettel's incident with the Pirelli tyre.
Here a german report:
http://www.motorsport-total.com/f1/news ... 12410.html
And dudes that`s the real secret of the RB7 success: a quickly warm up the rear tyre, but more important than that is how uniform this temperature is being brought to the tyre via those turbine bladesOwen.C93 wrote:Interesting ducts on the wheel that I haven't noticed before.
This design or system is responsible for what "generally accepted" performance advantage of RB?dren wrote:Maybe during the formation lap there is a set-up where certain channels close and the car drives with the rear brakes dragging, so it builds up a lot of heat?
Those blades are for brake cooling exit, not for tyre heating flow.atanatizante wrote:And dudes that`s the real secret of the RB7 success: a quickly warm up the rear tyre, but more important than that is how uniform this temperature is being brought to the tyre via those turbine bladesOwen.C93 wrote:Interesting ducts on the wheel that I haven't noticed before.
They said, that Seb was standing too long in the starting grid, because the last ones on the grid were too slow. Normaly he brakes down short before the start-finish straight, that the tyres of his followers cool down. And then, in the starting grid he has that advantage. I think a lot of people will look at that.ajprice wrote:Another report on the exhaust heated wheel rims, and in English too! - http://totalf1.com/full_story/view/4006 ... i_problem/
Does the German article say its what could have caused the tyre going at Abu Dhabi?