All tires are a challenge to characterize... both with the data itself and how it is interpreted.hardingfv32 wrote:So what characteristic makes the current tires so hard to master?
The teams have had plenty of time to use the normal tools to develop the setup for these tires, yet they are still able to miss the target on any given weekend or even between teammates.
I can see during the race that damaging the compound could be an issue, but we see major performance differences during qualifying that are dramatic.
These are very special tires to accomplish that.
Brian
Paul Hembrey was stating in Racecar engineering some time ago their Toyota Test mule was effectively a tyre characterisation machine equipped with 150or something data channels solely tyre related and all these data are fully avaialable to all teams if i rememeber correctly.Jersey Tom wrote:All tires are a challenge to characterize... both with the data itself and how it is interpreted.hardingfv32 wrote:So what characteristic makes the current tires so hard to master?
The teams have had plenty of time to use the normal tools to develop the setup for these tires, yet they are still able to miss the target on any given weekend or even between teammates.
I can see during the race that damaging the compound could be an issue, but we see major performance differences during qualifying that are dramatic.
These are very special tires to accomplish that.
Brian
How much and what quality of data Pirelli supplies the teams is unknown to us.
I don't think that would be remotely sufficient to even start characterizing the tires. It's something nice to have down the road, but not to start with. In my opinion and experience anyway.marcush. wrote:Paul Hembrey was stating in Racecar engineering some time ago their Toyota Test mule was effectively a tyre characterisation machine equipped with 150or something data channels solely tyre related and all these data are fully avaialable to all teams if i rememeber correctly.
I don't believe the construction nor tread compounds have been the same this whole time. But even if they were.. no, don't think you'd have enough.hardingfv32 wrote:Assuming the construction and chemistry is consistent, it is not possible for the teams to have developed the data they need from all the actual testing/racing they have done to date?
But why is this process taking so long with these tires? What characteristic would create this level of difficulty? These teams have been adapting to new tires for decades. they should know how to get the job done.marcush. wrote:I might be completely wrong but my view is you need to measure and look for potential areas of performance you might have been untapped
exactly,I think these tyres are extremely sensitive and extremely inconsistent . Any performance tyre has a temperature curve, and if the tyre is consistent through out the temp range teams can predict the variability in performance.hardingfv32 wrote:But why is this process taking so long with these tires? What characteristic would create this level of difficulty? These teams have been adapting to new tires for decades. they should know how to get the job done.marcush. wrote:I might be completely wrong but my view is you need to measure and look for potential areas of performance you might have been untapped
Brian
1) Entirely possible Pirelli has given the teams insufficient quantity or quality of test data. To be fair, there's no reason they HAVE to do it in a single supplier series.hardingfv32 wrote:But why is this process taking so long with these tires? What characteristic would create this level of difficulty? These teams have been adapting to new tires for decades. they should know how to get the job done.
How do you figure? Different drivers have varying preference for balance - this much is obvious. If your weight distribution is locked in... it may be perfect for Driver A, too tight for Driver B, and too free for Driver C.marcush. wrote:The weight distribution thing is the same for everyone...so in my view not counting.
Not going to comment on this one given that it's my job in a different series.So JT ,in theory what would you do JT...no access to the tyres for benchmarking the tyres at home and only a few laps during the weekends ...and possibly not data not much worth...you have to carry some elaborate equipment to the track and try to characterise tyres in a non destructive way during the weekend or what?
At least in theory the tyres should be the same all year..but you may get a set or a single tyre from an older batch ...ruining all your correlating as it was stored in bright sun in Bahrein for the whole weekend...