The notion is predicated on Pirelli doing something illegal. So, I think the FIA would be the last to know. Given the teams' relative lack of understanding of the tires thus far, it's unlikely anyone would even notice such changes. But, if someone did start asking questions, Pirelli could claim natural variation. It doesn't take much.myurr wrote:Totally agree that it's not happening - was just hoping someone would know if the FIA allocates the tyres which would then make it that much more implausible as it would require the collusion of two organisations.
[...]
While I agree they could (and even suggested so previously), it would be far-fetched when the tyres are 100% manmade compounds. It would suggest they can't control their own manufacturing processes and therefore I doubt very much they would consider it.bhallg2k wrote:Pirelli could claim natural variation
+1Tomba wrote:May I kindly ask to discuss the European GP instead of ranting on about how Pirelli have or have not made this season a lottery? This has been discussed tirelessly and it seems nobody is going to change opinion anyway...
Anyway, my bet for Valencia is Alonso, if only for his home crowd to finally see their man flourish there. Furthermore, Ferrari have announced they will have yet another upgrade package on their car, and if it proves as efficient as the last updates, it could well help the Spaniard achieving his goal.
I'm not sure what McLaren will do for Button though, I'm unaware of any major car updates or changes for them, so it could be another struggle for the Brit.
Eddie Jordan isn't exactly the fount of all knowledge when it comes to anything technical though. You had all the teams on the grid with multi-million pound budgets chasing every last hundredth of a second of performance throwing their resources at understanding the tyres and optimising the suspension layouts, warm up procedures, target lap times they drive to, etc. Naturally they're going to get on top of the tyres sooner or later.Gridlock wrote:Eddie Jordan was convinced last year that the compounds had changed through the year for corporate reasons, no matter what Pirelli said, and given the one tyre this year is supposed to be identical to one of last years (the medium became the hard iirc?) other than the slight profile change at the shoulder I tend to agree. How can one of this year's tyres be the same as one of last years and yet not one single team understands it?
FIA allocates tyresmyurr wrote:Do we know that Pirelli allocate tyres to drivers or teams or if that is under control of the FIA? I'd hope it was the latter...
Code: Select all
F1 - Pirelli: Cracking the barcode
1800 tyres to each grand prix
In the first of a series of features, we look at how tyres are made and distributed to the Formula One teams…
Pirelli brings around 1800 tyres to each grand prix, but the destiny of these tyres is mapped out long before they arrive at the circuit. The tyres for each race are made in a specific production run before the grand prix.
They are manufactured at Pirelli’s state of the art motorsport facility in Izmit, just outside the Turkish capital of Istanbul. During the production process, each tyre is allocated a barcode provided by the FIA (the sport’s governing body). This barcode is the tyre’s ‘passport’, which is embedded firmly into the structure during the vulcanisation process and cannot be swapped. The code contains all the details of each tyre, making it traceable throughout the race weekend with Pirelli’s RTS (Racing Tyre System) software, which can read and update all the data.
For European grands prix, the tyres are then transported to Pirelli’s logistics and distribution hub at Didcot in the United Kingdom. Once they arrive there, an FIA official receives a list of bar codes, which relate to the tyres that will be taken to the next grand prix. The FIA (the sport’s governing body) then allocates bar codes – and therefore tyres – to each individual teams at random. Pirelli itself is not involved in this process at all, meaning that the Italian firm cannot influence which tyres are allocated to which teams – although a rigorous quality control process in Izmit ensures that all the tyres leaving the factory are identical.
Once at the circuit, the tyres are then allocated to the teams in strict compliance with the list that has been previously prepared by the FIA. The bar codes allow both the FIA and Pirelli to ensure that the right teams, according to the regulations, are using the correct tyres.
Each team is allocated a Pirelli engineer, who works exclusively with that team for all of the year, but the database that every engineer works off allows the engineer to see only information relating specifically to his or her team over the weekend, so that individual strategies are not compromised. Development data is overseen by Pirelli’s senior engineers, who monitor all the information in order to assist the research team in charge of shaping the next generation of tyres.
As Pirelli’s motorsport director Paul Hembery points out: “Even if we wanted to – which we certainly don’t – there is no way that we could influence which tyres are being allocated to which teams, as this is a job taken care of entirely by the FIA once the tyres have left the Izmit factory. It is just another way that impartiality can be ensured among all the teams, which is a huge priority for us as exclusive tyre supplier. The way that our team engineers work also respects this confidentiality, which is always of paramount importance.”
COUNTDOWN TO A GRAND PRIX
Before the grand prix:
Pirelli, with the approval from the FIA, selects the tyres for the race – a softer compound plus a harder compound.
Production of the tyre allocation begins at the Izmit factory in Turkey. We supply approximately 1800 Formula One tyres for each race; about 700 more if the race is a GP2 round as well as 600 for GP3.
Two weeks before the grand prix:
For European events the tyres for the race are transported by road from Izmit to Didcot: a journey of approximately 3100 kilometres that takes three days.
The tyres arrive at the Didcot facility and have their bar codes scanned into Pirelli’s system. The FIA (the governing body of world motorsport) is then notified of the bar codes.
At random, the FIA allocates certain barcodes to each team. The allocated tyres are then sorted out by team in Didcot and loaded into seven trucks for transportation to the grand prix (four trucks for F1, three trucks for GP2 and GP3).
One week before the grand prix:
The trucks set off from Didcot for the race, normally arriving on the Monday before the race takes place. The 18 fitters set up the fitting area and the barcodes are confirmed again with the FIA.
Five days before the grand prix:
The fitters start fitting tyres onto the rims. It takes an experienced fitter 2.5 minutes to fit one tyre from start to finish: for all the tyres of the weekend they need two days. The teams own the wheels: they are brought to Pirelli at the circuit for the tyres to be fitted onto them.
During the grand prix weekend:
The sporting regulations determine that one set of the harder dry tyre must be returned after the first practice session, with one set of the softer and one set of the harder compound to be returned before the start of the third practice session. A further set of softer and one of the harder compound must be returned before the start of qualifying. This means that each driver has six sets of the dry compounds (three of each specification) available for qualifying and the race.
Tyres that are returned get taken off their rims, as they won’t be used anymore, with the rims being returned to the teams.
After the grand prix:
All remaining tyres, both used and unused, are taken off their rims and then transported back to Didcot. When they arrive, the tyres are taken to a specialised plant where they are shredded and then burned at very high temperature in order to produce fuel for cement factories. The material produced in this process can also be used for road surfaces and other industrial applications.
Yes but that's the whole issue though. You can't test a given sample because, if the conspiracy theorists are correct in that Pirelli are giving different people better tyres in terms of pace and longevity, then you obviously have to test the rubber of each tyre, and you have to know for sure that the compound sample is identical to the one on each tyre. I DON'T think this is happening, mind you.n smikle wrote:FIA can so some sort of scientific analysis I think. Or FIA could just randomly mix the tyres up before they assign them to teams. I think that ensures that any "winning" tyres get spread around like Dominoes. I don't know if they do that though, but they should.QLDriver wrote:I'd have thought it wouldn't be difficult to get enough rubber to run some testing on. Given that the sample sizes for the kind of thermal-analytical testing that you need are usually measured in tens of mg's, even a few pieces of molding flash would probably suffice to get a good analysis of the properties and composition.raymondu999 wrote:From a tyre science point of view, actually, what CAN the FIA do? I mean, I'd imagine they can stick a spindly ruler into the wear-measurement holes and find the same amount of tread. Sure. But how can the FIA ensure that it's the same compound, short of taking a sample of rubber from each tyre and playing with it? Honest question as I know nothing about this.