i agree with the awkwardness of the strategyEdax wrote: โ18 May 2017, 20:13I miss the tyre war. But realistically it doesn't work anymore in the current hypercompetitive environment. Either one of the manufacturers takes it too far and creates a safety risk or one manufacturer gets an advantage and the whole field switches. Happens in all prime series.
Tyres are OK now for me. I do find the tyre rule annoying. It is designed to promote on track overtaking, but a side effect is that it prevents real agressive pit stop strategies. For instance a three stopper using softs only, or a one stopper on mediums only.
Due to the tire rules, the strategy always seems to be a bit akward to me.
After about a year of the Soviet Unionโs efforts to steal Concorde designs, the design teams were able to comprehend the intensity of the industrial espionage. The design teams fired back with a humorous touch. A false tire formula, which actually had the consistency of bubble gum-- had been channeled to the KGB.
The complaint is not about tyre degradation, but about tyre wear. Yes there is a viable difference between it.WaikeCU wrote: โ19 May 2017, 12:23Didn't we complain at the beginning of the Pirelli era about tires who fall off the cliff quickly? Tires that don't last long, heavy marbling and such. Now, they've made tougher rubber, we start to complain that they don't degrade well enough? I don't think we actually need a massive change tbh, but maybe a qualifying tire that last maybe 3 laps or so?
Interesting. You would have to rename those tyres though. I would call them slowest ultra short life, Slower Super Short life, Slow Short life and not so Slow medium life.holeindalip wrote: โ21 May 2017, 01:23I've been thinking about this for awhile...
How about a single compound with a wide operating window but still have the us,ss,s,m.
Us would be a full slick ss would have two grooves, soft would have 4 grooves, and medium would have 6 grooves.something that would give a nice 1.5-2 sec difference between them and all the cars would be able to be within the proper operatinf window.keep the same bring three tires to a race and mandated 2 compound use on race day..... Thoughts on this one??
Would tire wear scale progressively with the grooved tires? Being from the states I didn't begin following f1 until the end of '12, how did the grooved bridgestones fair?PlatinumZealot wrote: โ21 May 2017, 19:35Interesting. You would have to rename those tyres though. I would call them slowest ultra short life, Slower Super Short life, Slow Short life and not so Slow medium life.holeindalip wrote: โ21 May 2017, 01:23I've been thinking about this for awhile...
How about a single compound with a wide operating window but still have the us,ss,s,m.
Us would be a full slick ss would have two grooves, soft would have 4 grooves, and medium would have 6 grooves.something that would give a nice 1.5-2 sec difference between them and all the cars would be able to be within the proper operatinf window.keep the same bring three tires to a race and mandated 2 compound use on race day..... Thoughts on this one??
I am no tyre expert but logically those tyres you described would all have the same softness and your "ultra soft" would actually have the longest service life out of those tyres.