DRCorsa wrote:ubrben wrote:DRCorsa wrote:Pirelli constructed a set of tyres according to FIA's requirements.
Pirelli would have been able to construct a super grippy tyre lasting more laps. But that wasn't what they had been asked to provide.
Rubbish - that's their level. Let's not confuse engineering with PR.
Ben
Pirelli's level is rubbish along with their 139 years of experience and history.
OK, i am not here to disagree with you, if only you provide some handy facts proving that Pirelli is unable to simulate and control the wear rate of their tyres.
I don't know if this is an anti-italian "extension" of the traditional anti-Ferrari theme, but let's not ignore some facts.
From Racecar Engineering magazine, February 2011:
"
Our modelling is really very advanced. We have been developing it over the last 10 years, and now we are able to simulate a lot of tyre characterstics, the contact patch, the friction coefficient, the cornering forces, high-speed rigidity, rolling resistance and all of the items connected with fatigue in any part of the structure. We did a huge amount of this before building up a prototype tyre. It is very similar to what happens with simulation on a grand prix car where they model every charaqcteristic." Maurizio Bioiocchi, Pirelli's R&D director
"
We were also asked that it perhaps not be as durable as the 2010 tyre after a car did nearly a full race distance without changing. I am guessing we will have a number of races where two changes will be required, as the wear rate has been engineered to be higher than 2010. The engineers are different though. They would like one set of tyres, then concentrate on the car, but the team principals think differently. It is a different design input. We could make them last the whole season, but we also want entertaining races!" Paul Hembery, Pirelli's motorsport director
I'm not anti-Italian at all. I love working with Ferrari (in GT) and have done successfully this year.
My best experience of Pirelli's level was the Spa LMS race last year. Racing Box ran two Lola LMP2 cars. A pro-driver car on sponsored Pirellis and a gentleman driver car running another tyre brand. The gents outqualified the pros. When the tyre life is a fixed demand - i.e. two fuel tank stints in LMP2 the grip level from Pirelli was not competitive.
I don't mean to devalue Pirelli. Developing tyres at this level is a challenging job, but as someone with some experience of the job I'd respectfully contend that most of what the Pirelli guys are quoting is PR guff that bears very little relation to what's actually going on. And I say that as someone who can spout PR guff with the best of them.
The (sad?) reality is that most quotes on technical topics vary between outright lies and manipulation on the part of the person being quoted.
Ben