I found interesting the fact that today in GP3 testing they used threaded Pirellis. I asked Paul Hembery about them, hope I'll get an answer too.
Pat Symonds wrote:The vertical stiffness of both front and rear tyres has reduced but the lateral stiffness has been cut considerably at the front and slightly at the rear. For the first time, Pirelli have produced tyres that are asymmetric and therefore exhibit ply steer. This has a similar effect to adding toe to the wheel as the resultant ply steer force acts toward the center line of the car. When the tyre is vertically loaded however, the ply steer force increases and when unloaded it decreases. This has the effect of adding a small amount of cornering force over and above that which may be experienced with symmetrical tyres.
In terms of compounds, the hard compound, now coded with orange markings, has both a slightly higher stiffness and a higher working temperature. As such it can be regarded as a bit of a back stop to the other three compounds which have all been made marginally softer.
I dont understand... Do you want 2009 Bridgestones or what? 1 pitstop and no strategy ? When F1 has no strategy 40% of the show is lost m8! Drivers are suppose to be able to handle tyres and everything else, nothing more nothing less.Dyanxx wrote:The new Pirelli tyres are garbage, and apparently once we came to Melbourne everything would work out fine, well today it certainly never.
Sombrero wrote:I wish 2013 is the last year with Pirelli...
Bollocks.Dyanxx wrote:The new Pirelli tyres are garbage, and apparently once we came to Melbourne everything would work out fine, well today it certainly never.
Think it's more the latter combined with unexpected conditions that they weren't able to set the cars up for.raymondu999 wrote:I thought it was interesting that Sutil who was amazing on the primes was rubbish on the super softs - and the Mercedes, who made the supersofts work better than the others, couldn't match the lotus on the mediums. I think we'll be seeing some cars with a similar problem to the 2011 Ferrari, which could only make specific compounds work. Or perhaps, the tyres have a very small "combined sweet spot" - ie it's easy to get into the option's sweet spot, easy to get into the prime's sweet spot, but not easy to get a setup that gets into both sweet spots.
But at the same time as you say that it would be hard to get a setup that works both compounds OK, this weekend we had SS and Medium, and they are close together in their working temp range.raymondu999 wrote:I thought it was interesting that Sutil who was amazing on the primes was rubbish on the super softs - and the Mercedes, who made the supersofts work better than the others, couldn't match the lotus on the mediums. I think we'll be seeing some cars with a similar problem to the 2011 Ferrari, which could only make specific compounds work. Or perhaps, the tyres have a very small "combined sweet spot" - ie it's easy to get into the option's sweet spot, easy to get into the prime's sweet spot, but not easy to get a setup that gets into both sweet spots.