The latest uproar about tires in the sport concerns whether the teams are heating them too much with their tire warmers. Pirelli says the tires should not be heated to more than 110 degrees. (I presume that is Fahrenheit, not Celsius! ) But some in the pit lane claim it is easy to use the warmers to get the tires much hotter than that.
In Korea, we had one shot from a thermal camera of tires going on at a pit stop. The thermal image was bright orange and showed immediate cooling as the stop was completed. So, either the lads are racing with tires that are at 110 degrees or less or the tires we saw on screen were a LOT hotter than that.
Personally, I think tire warmers are ridiculous. One of the highlights of the racing used to be watching how the drivers managed cold tires after a stop. But Formula One disagrees with me, sadly.
Here's the latest:
Pirelli clamps down amid illegal tyre heating claims
Pirelli has clamped down on enforcing the operating guidelines of its tyres, amid rumours some teams were not playing along.
After the tyre-exploding British grand prix this year, the FIA backed Pirelli's move to force teams to stay within certain operating guidelines. The guidelines set strict limits on things like tyre camber and pressures, but also pre-session tyre heating, according to Germany's Auto Motor und Sport.
The report said teams were not allowed to 'boost' temperatures in their respective heating systems beyond 110 degrees for one hour. But a Force India team member is quoted as saying: "The heating systems are easily manipulated. If you boost more than allowed, you have an advantage."
Auto Motor und Sport said Pirelli has reacted by checking pre-running tyre temperatures not only via the heating systems, but also with their own probes.