raymondu999 wrote:Perhaps, given that the posts don't harbor a direct relevance to the Valencia GP in particular (I know, I'm also guilty of contributing to it) and how some people are not happy with the existence of said posts in the 2012 European GP thread ecosystem, they could be branched out to a separate thread for discussion?
I thought of that. However, the tire threads quickly become, frankly, retarded by bias, and I still don't think a thread specifically about tire cheating methodology - "A Guide to Tire Cheating," "Rubber Justice," "The Pirellotteri Ticket," "The 'Y' in 'Tyre' is Actually for 'Y not?'" "Tire Allocation the Sicilian Way," "Pirelli Claims Company Dog Ate Spec Sheets," and so on and so forth - would be a good idea either.
However, it was probably silly of me to assume that since no one is actually accusing anyone of foul play, a discussion of tire cheating prompted by Hembery's poorly timed statement in regard to this race could occur here without much of an issue. It seems no amount of logic will ever defeat "the skimmers."
For that, I'm deeply sorry.
So, I'm just going to throw out a quick recap, and then I'll go back to my corner. (For about the 12th or 13th time,
in no way do I think this is actually happening.)
If Pirelli wanted to influence the outcome of a race, they would produce a run of identical tires for the race they wanted to influence. However, the construction for the tires in that production run would be based upon, and optimized for, the specific team/driver Pirelli chose to favor for that race. Such is made possible because of the reams of data Pirelli has for every team/driver. Those identical tires would then be allocated to the teams by the FIA*. On the surface, none of this would appear to be abnormal.
The favoritism comes into play when teams A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, and L are each allocated identical tires from the FIA that are nonetheless optimized for team C. In this manner, the favored team could be different for every race, and because teams are having considerable difficulty figuring out the tires, it's likely that no one would notice those changes. If someone did indeed start asking questions, Pirelli could easily claim natural variance from one production run to another.
Like I've said repeatedly,
it's extremely unlikely this is actually happening. That doesn't change the possibility that it
could happen, though. (
It probably won't. I cannot stress that enough.)
I only mention these things because this is probably the most F1-related fun I'll have while F1 is in Valencia.
* FYI: Tires are produced throughout the season and then allocated by the FIA on a race-by-race basis, i.e. Pirelli doesn't just make a massive batch of tires at the beginning of the season and then hand them over to the FIA.
EDIT: I gave it some attention-grabbers. I want to leave little chance that important points can be easily glossed over.