This got me wondering if anther way to shift the percentage "aero/mechanical" more towards mechanical couldn't be the shift to low profile tires. Right now teams are stuck with several inches of black rubber that effectively act like a mechanical spring in series with the rest of the suspension, only a spring that they can only partially control, which changes behavior with temperature, and whose setup has to be sacrificed in favor of the ideal contact patch. They also get two different versions of it during each race, and sometimes the FIA forces them to run with the blue or green painted version.Sebastian Vettel wrote:“I think in general what we need to follow another car closer in medium speed, high speed, slow speed corners is more mechanical grip. So shift the percentage between aero/mechanical more towards more mechanical. How to do that? I think we need better tyres that allow us to go quicker.”
Low profile tires have a much smaller version of this rubbery spring.
If that is removed or at least reduced, teams would have to increase suspension travel and possibly suspension complexity, but this suspension element would now be under their control, temperature insensitive and tuned for its proper purpose.
What does everyone think, would moving this big, bulky, rubbery black spring to the inside of the car, where it would look like a coil, a flexure and/or a damper help to increase the percentage of mechanical vs aero based grip?