MOWOG wrote:Michelin has been advocating for larger wheels instead of the 14" wheels the sport presently uses. Presumably with a little fender modifications, a current F1 wheel and tire would fit nicely on a 1980 Accord, which is primarily why Michelin wants the sport to go larger.
My speculation would be Michelin would have wanted larger wheels just so they don't need to invest in all the 13" build equipment for tires of that size (and wide ply servers, etc etc). I'd guess it has nothing to do with anything concerning consumer tires.
As for low profile tires - I don't see it happening. From that article I see that as more a side comment than anything. Some interesting bits...
Pay Symonds wrote:If we had a lower profile tyre with a stiffer sidewall and a lower volume of air cavity, it would certainly be much easier to manage.
I'd debate that. pV = nRT. If a tire goes from Temperature A to Temperature B the ratio of internal inflation pressure should be the same (secondary effects aside) regardless of air volume.
Pirelli boss Paul Hembery said the main issue is tyre pressure, as the difference between a cold and a hot tyre is significant.
How much does a F1 tire build up pressure between hot and cold? ~5 psi maybe? (Guessing here). There are other open wheel series who can manage that. There are closed wheel race series where the pressure builds up ~25 psi from cold to hot, and they can manage it.
Now with all that said, it's really a question of who is incurring costs and where. Change is expensive. Tire blanket ban I'd imagine will be quite expensive for Pirelli in compound development, probably likewise expensive for teams in getting better understanding of broader temperature ranges or figuring out how fundamentally different tread compounds behave, how to get additional temperature, whatever.
Going to larger wheel size and lower profile tires would be
massively expensive for Pirelli.. cutting all new molds, big development programs, more track tests, and the like. Similarly very high cost for teams.. maybe not from a redesign side since they'd potentially be making all new parts every year anyway.. but certainly from a development and test perspective.
Really way too late in 2014 already to be making a change to a different wheel size.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for shaking up rules every so often - changes the running order. But it doesn't need to be huge changes
every year. If we were to end up in 2016 with quiet turbo'd cars castrated by fuel flow, and weird looking (for an open wheel car) low profile tires, and a bunch of contrived gizmos between DRS and ERS and brake by wire, etc etc.. what exactly have we fundamentally gained?
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.