Yes, Pirelli at the cutting edge...Yeah so reports say they found cuts in all the dmged/broken tires, and no delaminations.
Wonder what kerb it was that cut them.
Yes, Pirelli at the cutting edge...Yeah so reports say they found cuts in all the dmged/broken tires, and no delaminations.
Wonder what kerb it was that cut them.
xD The weird part is that the sidewalls this year was suppose to be stronger then before, what has changed ?Sombrero wrote:Yes, Pirelli at the cutting edge...Yeah so reports say they found cuts in all the dmged/broken tires, and no delaminations.
Wonder what kerb it was that cut them.
So if they ditch the young driver's test, which would probably take on at a later date, I assume Mercedes would be allowed to participate at this test, if the young driver's test runs at a later time?Formula 1 teams are pushing for next month's young driver test at Silverstone to be ditched in favour of a full-on tyre test with race drivers to help Pirelli overcome its current problems.
With the sport now accepting that something needs to be done to ensure there is no repeat of the tyre failures that blighted the British Grand Prix, pressure is being put on the FIA to consider abandoning the running of young drivers.
Perhaps, since it would be foolish to not run with the full grid to test as much as possible when you can.turbof1 wrote:They are FINALLY getting the message:
http://www.racer.com/f1-teams-pushing-f ... le/301094/
So if they ditch the young driver's test, which would probably take on at a later date, I assume Mercedes would be allowed to participate at this test, if the young driver's test runs at a later time?Formula 1 teams are pushing for next month's young driver test at Silverstone to be ditched in favour of a full-on tyre test with race drivers to help Pirelli overcome its current problems.
With the sport now accepting that something needs to be done to ensure there is no repeat of the tyre failures that blighted the British Grand Prix, pressure is being put on the FIA to consider abandoning the running of young drivers.
In May I was looking at the possible root cause for the problem when I posted the above. I thought that excessive heat dissipation in the shoulder was at fault. That problem has now been made worse by the stronger bonding process as Dragonfly suggested.WhiteBlue wrote:I don't think that is the right analysis. The energy balance of the tyres got affected by making the shoulder softer and generating more heat much easier. That is the root cause of the fragile tyres. Those teams that manage the 2013 tyres best like Lotus are very carefully avoiding any contribution to dissipate work into the tyre shoulder simplistically explained by a soft suspension that makes the tyre work a lot less. Those like Red Bull have too little scope for suspension softening because their aerodynamic concept requires very small tolerances in rake and ride height. At least that seems like a sensible explanation to me.richard_leeds wrote:So I guess the need is for a tyre more tolerant of extreme heat and temperature that wears away at the same rate.
If it were just a case of making compounds more heat resistant I'm sure Pirelli could come up with a solution. But the problem is the excess of heat dissipation in the shoulders and that will not go away unless they make a fundamental change to the construction.
The second point is the steel band instead of the Kevlar reinforcement. I think the idea was good but the image it creates of Pirelli is detrimental. They will abandon this idea simply for marketing and image reasons. It actually reminds me of the Michelin problems in Indianapolis 2005. They also added a steel belt and the tyre shoulder ruptures under dynamic loads. My personal view is that Michelin had a problem with hitting a resonance frequency which is probably the worst problem you can have. It shows that you have to be extremely careful when you modify the spring and damper properties of the tyres. They are integral to the suspension properties and teams rely on the tyre manufacturer to be very consistent and conservative with the safety.
Generally I think that Pirelli does too much messing around with the tyres in order to generate publicity.
I hope that Pirelli are more objective and more safety concerned when their next statement comes out. If just a different bonding process can cause those massive explosions the underlying root cause has to be taken serious as a safety issue. The next step has to be a new and safe 2013 Mark II specification IMO. Even the FiA agrees now that F1 has a safety issue with the Mark I tyres specification.Dragonfly wrote:The stronger bonding between belt and protector simply moved the breaking point to the next weaker part and bond - the side walls (or shoulders, not sure about the exact English term)....
To be fair, when I get shot by pieces of rubber coming off from a driver in front his rim, I'd rather wear kevlar then steel #drypirellijokeHuntresa wrote:Nice Ted Kravitz on his notebook snarky saying they switched to steel belt cause its cheaper:D:D
Since they haven't performed a full analysis yet and they are not sure what happened how can they say "it's something new"?Speaking after the race, Pirelli Motorsport Director Paul Hembery refused to give much away before the completion of full analysis, but said the problem was new.
"Obviously today wasn’t foreseen," Hembery explained. "We’ve seen something new. It's a different type of problem. We’re currently performing our analysis."
He added: "We’ve got to go away and understand what happened. When we’ve got the facts then we can understand what’s happened and get to the core of the issue. We take these things seriously and when we have the answers we’ll let you know."
When you don't understand your product - every result is new.andartop wrote:Since they haven't performed a full analysis yet and they are not sure what happened how can they say "it's something new"?
That much is obvious, but that has happened to Michelin in 2005 as well. So it is not new that something like that can happen, and happen to very experienced high performance tyre makers as well.Jersey Tom wrote:I feel it's similar to any other design situation - you know you'll never have a 100% prediction of all the load cases and whatever, so you put in safety margin. I feel like something fundamental is missing from their internal process of being able to design and build tires consistently with an appropriate amount of margin, and to predict failure modes.
The main point to me is the question did the tyre maker act responsibly by introducing a design that consciously gambled with a low safety margin in the context of his situation? I think there is little doubt that both companies were capable to design and deliver a tyre that would have been safe but preferred not to.Jersey Tom wrote:I think this is what those of us who have been pretty firm critics have been fearful of since the beginning - getting into a situation where as a smaller company without as much success in high profile and high demand racing.. you end up shooting yourself in the foot and being in a tough spot that's hard to dig out of. On that note, I still say there's only so much "Well it's not Pirelli's fault that [whatever]..." before you have to step back and say, they signed up for this contract and should have known what they were getting into.
Jersey Tom wrote:We'll see if they can dig themselves out of the deepening hole.
Agreed. Pirelli can state 'we were asked too' all they like - no-one asked for this. It's like Pirelli have gone to an effort to prove a point - it's that absurd. No tyre should ever do that, not at 80km/h, and certainly not at 300km/h. If you're not sure what your tyres can/can't do - don't run them. I cannot believe Pirelli has supplied tyres where they've gambled with human life. It's that serious.WhiteBlue wrote:And that brings us to the question what the FiA should do about the next tyre supply contract. In my view they should disqualify Pirelli for the next three years and bring back Michelin simply as a reminder that you cannot gamble with safety components.Jersey Tom wrote:I feel it's similar to any other design situation - you know you'll never have a 100% prediction of all the load cases and whatever, so you put in safety margin.