lebesset wrote:WhiteBlue wrote:Jersey Tom wrote:Pirelli on the other hand have had several weekends this year (so far!) of major tire issues, plus poor performance in general, have apparently supplied teams junk data to begin with (with their wind tunnel tires), and seemingly only take any sort of ownership of their faults after being pressured. Not to mention their reputation in some other race series has been quite poor.
You have been telling us of the downside of Pirelli for a long time. Some credit should be given for that. I personally had an open mind about Pirelli initally but now I cannot defend them against your judgement. I think you are spot on.
quite clear you have a bias elsewhere tom , presumably you have a connection with another manufacturer
care to come out into the open about it ?
There's no secret that I used to work for a tire company, I've said that many times. There's no bias in this case - I give credit where credit is due. For the most part there are the "big three" of tire companies - Bridgestone/Firestone, Michelin/BFG, and Goodyear/Dunlop. Each of those "families" have extensive R&D capability, a large workforce, and lots of experience at center stage in high level motorsports delivering excellent products.
Pirelli just aren't in that group, not for bankroll and capabilities, nor for results. Let's put hard numbers to it and talk annual revenue for a number of tire companies:
Bridgestone: 30 billion USD
Michelin: 28 billion USD
Goodyear: 19 billion USD
Pirelli: 8 billion USD
Hankook: 4 billion USD
Just not even close, and it's reflected in results. Pirelli have provided poor product and service in F1 in these recent years as a single supplier. When there are substantial durability problems and failures over
multiple weeks (which I can't recall having happened before in the series), it's no longer subjective interpretation - it's pretty undeniable. Not to mention denying/hiding the cause of some of the early failures ("punctures"), supplying bogus wind tunnel tires, etc etc.
If someone wants to play the card of, "Oh well they're being told to bring crap tires, blah blah blah" then look back to when they were in open competition with Goodyear in F1. Didn't win a single race over the years they were there.
Might have had
one pole position. Or go ask the drivers and engineers in other race series that have to use their products, get the answer straight from the horses mouth.
I'll be quite fair and say it's a tough position to be in as a smaller company, but it's also a position they signed up for and knew they were getting into.
In any event I feel like all of this stuff that's going on now was quite apparent several years ago when they were first taking the contract. Having worked in the tire industry (specifically in the motorsport sector) I had a pretty strong opinion on it, absolutely - but based on personal experience, not irrational or unfounded bias.
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.