stevesingo wrote:Any one see how the new Technical Directive will change anything?
FIA wrote:
during practice sessions, qualifying and the race, "the minimum starting tyre pressures, as set out in the Pirelli preview for each event, will always be checked before the wheels are fitted to the car".
So from what I see, the teams have been pumping hot air in to the brake duct and brake system in order to heat the wheel rim, therefore generating the higher tyre pressures required on the start line.
What is stopping them heating the wheel rim off the car?
The cryptically worded FIA announcement was hard to understand at first. They were trying to announce a solution to a problem without admitting the specifics of the problem.
I think the problem was that tire pressures were only being checked after the wheels were bolted on the cars. Brake heat and other thermal masses on the car were used to heat the wheels on the car and thus raise the temp & pressure of the contained tire air. Going forward the rules say the tire pressure must be checked before the tires are bolted to the car.
Rules already said the only part of the wheel/tire assembly that can be heated is the tire perimeter (tread area). No blatant/obvious heating elements to the sidewalls or wheels. So now you can still heat the internal air as a "trick", but you have to first put the heat into the tire via the perimeter with a tire blanket, and as Hollus mentioned if you heat the tread rubber beyond some point you damage it.
Or you have to figure out another clever way of discreetly heating the air in the tire before the FIA does the off-car pressure check.