I personally find comments such as this hard to understand and a little ill considered. Especially when it seems most would happily accept a performance difference based on manufacturer. It makes the "Pirelli Bashing" sound more like sour grapes because a favored team isn't getting the best from them as opposed to an argument based on logical reasoning.Pup wrote:And I'd welcome them with a parade and fireworks. I'm sick and tired of all the niceties that fly around every weekend toward Pirelli. They make crap, inconsistent tires, period. Bring back the pros.
As this is a highly subjective topic, I personally think the tyres have made this the most enjoyable championship in a great number of years as teams now need to account for the tyre performance to make everything work on race day!! Why should the tyres "not" be a major consideration in strategy??
If you think the current Pirelli's are such a joke, then surely you woudl support simply mandating a tyre that lasts the entire race distance and has a definable performance drop off over its life. Or how about mandating pit stops within a predetermined lap window to retain the pit stop work part of the equation and keep tyre performance out of it all together.
As such, (again just my opinion) it is not the tyres that are inconsistent, period. It is the inconsistency of the teams ability to get up to speed and come to grips with how the new tyre performs. Everybody has the same tyres and it is a level playing field.
If the tyres are setup sensitive, be sensitive to your setup. If they respond to heat cycling a certain way, cycle them accordingly.
Previously teams never had to think about it as the Bridgestones were too durable and effectively took tyre strategy out of the equation, allowing a huge comparative advantage to established teams that had resources to optimise them coupled with years of optimisation work. The Pirelli's have removed this and evened out field to my mind.
The Pirelli’s have definable and predetermined performance envelope in which they work. There is finally a definable difference in compounds whereas with the Bridgestones there was eventually no comparative differentiation in the old soft vs hard compounds.
The Pirelli's respond very differently to heat cycling, suspension and chassis setup as well as chassis weight distribution and engine loadings than the Bridgestones ever did. This sensitivity is not a bad thing, it is what makes the racing and tyre strategy so important and the watching enjoyable.
So what 2012 has now is a situation where teams are being forced to think about the tyres. Some are out of their depth and some are well out of their comfort zone in trying to cope with how to get the tyres to work within their performance envelope.
I have had conversations surrounding the Renault engines effect on tyre performance. It is known to be down on power and likely has a better torque profile as well. This it is undoubtedly helping Lotus and Red Bull preserve their rear tyres giving them a performance advantage whereas the Mercedes and Ferrari engines aggressive torque delivery chew them up.
It seems all the top tier teams can get good performance out of the Pirelli’s. But some struggle to get good AND consistent performance.
The fact that at the we have had 7 winners from 9 events across 5 constructors is a testament to that. What also shows that tyre performance is there if you work hard and smart to find it is the mix of fastest laps across the teams and the other podium places.
Fastest laps from teams like Lotus and Sauber, wins from Williams and podiums from Lotus all point to the teams working to get the best from the tyre and thinking outside the box.
McLaren and its drivers are the team that seem to be all at sea and are being very slow to adapt to the new tyres. Mercedes to are struggling mostly with rear tyre wear issues, likely engine induced.
IMHO some of the best anecdotal evidence that the Pirelli’s work as part of the category this spread of fastest lap times are being set by various teams including Williams, Force India and Sauber at various stages throughout the races and not only the top teams. So teams can get good performance over a narrow window, but getting them to last takes proper engineering and some forethought. As such and as you would expect, the spread of the ultimate fastest laps and the winners is a mix of the usual suspects and the new up and comers who are getting their head around the tyres at a similar speed or better than some of the more stolid and unresponsive established teams
In the end, I think blaming the Pirelli tyres is tantamount to the old saying, “A bad tradesman always blames his tools.”
Some of the teams need to harden up, take a good look in the mirror and decide if they really want to be in F1 and are prepared to work for wins not rest on past exploits and expect the trophies to come to them easy.