It might be perception, but I think we had on the last 2 weekends (Bahrain, Barcelona) more tyre failures then any other 2 weekend period last year.beelsebob wrote:No, he means normal debris that would normally cause an instantaneous, catastrophic puncture. His assertion is that on last years tyre, the tyre would have punctured half a lap earlier, when the car ran over the debris. On this year's car, the tred gets sliced in half, but the tyre does not puncture due to the steel belt. Then, half way round the lap, the tyre reaches a critical temperature due to the damage, and the tred fails, causing a delamination.Touristas wrote:By debris,does he mean the sea of marbles and the whole chunks of rubber from his companys ridiculous tyres???gilgen wrote: More interesting is the fact that Hembrey is blaming track debris for the delaminations. Does he expect all tracks to be perfectly clean at all times?
His assertion is that the only reason we're complaining is that we're not seeing the debris strike and the puncture together (or even at all in the case of the debris strike), and hence they look like sudden, arbitrary, catarstrophic delaminations, rather than punctures.
Also, Alonso had a slow puncture, but his tyre did not got to the critical temperature. How come not?