am afraid logistics would have militated against staying on for an extra day at short noticeFoxHound wrote:I agree that the entire grid needs to be present to test these tyres. But as ever, it is the teams and Pirelli requesting these tests take place rather than the FIA taking the lead and naming a venue.
How many more debacles need to occur before they can act in a preventative fashion?
To ban the use of the 2014 tyre in Free practice 3 at Interlagos just goes to show how inept the organisation is at times.
The opportunity arises to use these tyres and the stewards refuse, in spite of the logistics involved in getting the rubber to Brazil in the first place and the consequences it has on the teams.
Massive face palm moment.
The solution for me would've been to hold a test the day after the GP, weather permitting. Saves millions for everyone, and it can be collated with data collected during the GP.
A step in the right direction, especially seeing as the 2013 cars can put much more pressure on the tyres in terms of DF then the 2014 cars can, but hardly the same pressure on the rears tho during accelaration.Kiril Varbanov wrote:https://twitter.com/Jamesallenonf1/stat ... 0741484544
turbof1 wrote:Pirelli is giving itself more freedom by producing conservative tyres. The biggest issue is something they can't test now: if the tyres can handle the torque for next year. What they can do right now is test the tyres in the lab and send the data to the teams. But they can do whatever they want now within the dimensions laid down by the regulations.
I don't think we'll get any dangerous dry weather situations with the 2014 tyres. Probably a lot of complaining about wheelspin. The biggest problem will be when it rains.
Testing might not be as necessary as it seems.
The teams all had the chance to run the tyres during P1 & P2. Only Red Bull bothered. Such is life.FoxHound wrote:I agree that the entire grid needs to be present to test these tyres. But as ever, it is the teams and Pirelli requesting these tests take place rather than the FIA taking the lead and naming a venue.
How many more debacles need to occur before they can act in a preventative fashion?
To ban the use of the 2014 tyre in Free practice 3 at Interlagos just goes to show how inept the organisation is at times.
The opportunity arises to use these tyres and the stewards refuse, in spite of the logistics involved in getting the rubber to Brazil in the first place and the consequences it has on the teams.
Massive face palm moment.
The solution for me would've been to hold a test the day after the GP, weather permitting. Saves millions for everyone, and it can be collated with data collected during the GP.
More important is what Pirelli do with the information gathered, with the rumours earlier this year that Merc want the rears as hard as a brick and the others are against that.Huntresa wrote:A step in the right direction, especially seeing as the 2013 cars can put much more pressure on the tyres in terms of DF then the 2014 cars can, but hardly the same pressure on the rears tho during accelaration.Kiril Varbanov wrote:https://twitter.com/Jamesallenonf1/stat ... 0741484544
And this was initiated by a rational vote among all teams present in F1 and simply not a move made by the kingpins of Formula 1 to maintain some form of advantage over the "peasants"?Kiril Varbanov wrote:https://twitter.com/Jamesallenonf1/stat ... 0741484544
There is one extremity taken out of the equation: high wearing down tyres. It does make things easier, a lot actually.Moxie wrote:turbof1 wrote:Pirelli is giving itself more freedom by producing conservative tyres. The biggest issue is something they can't test now: if the tyres can handle the torque for next year. What they can do right now is test the tyres in the lab and send the data to the teams. But they can do whatever they want now within the dimensions laid down by the regulations.
I don't think we'll get any dangerous dry weather situations with the 2014 tyres. Probably a lot of complaining about wheelspin. The biggest problem will be when it rains.
Testing might not be as necessary as it seems.
This is extreme engineering, and peoples' lives hang in the balance. While the engineers may design and build a race worthy product in the lab real world testing is absolutely necessary to confirm that the actual coincides with the theoretical in a variety of situations.
amc wrote:Pirelli? Doing Something by design? Come on...
No chance of that. All 2014 engines will be tested on track in an f1 car in 2014.raymondu999 wrote:I wonder if they will be 2013 cars fitted with prototype 2014 donkeys... that would be interesting