ringo wrote:Extra downforce can cause the tyres to degrade faster. There is a relationship with the mechanical properties of the tyre, the rotational speed and time. Degradation is inevitable but a car that is putting more load through the tyres over a period of time will cause them to degrade faster, ie the mechanical properties will degrade.
Not true, at least most of the time. In general, more load onto the tyre means more grip on the road, means less sliding, means less degradation. I can see only very limited scope for this causation not to occur.
Redbull's problem may be with how many laps they can get out of the tyre before the mechanical properties break down, balance against how long it takes to do a pitstop.
If a pit stop was 5 seconds long, for argument's sake, i think redbull would crank up the downforce on the car and accept that they can run 2 seconds a lap faster than anyone else for 10 laps instead of 15.
Sure, I just dispute the concept that it's a case of having too much downforce that causes the tyres to degrade that fast. If it were that simple, RedBull wouldn't be getting beaten by other competitors, as they would just be stripping downforce down to the optimal level, and winning.