what about 2 brandsPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑31 May 2017, 02:03I think a tyre war is only possible if all the artificial constraints, such as "make a trye designed to degrade" are removed. It would be madness for two different companies to chase such a requirement without obvious differences in tyre performance.
In my view of the hypothetical tyre war, the new directive from FIA would be:
"make the fastest tyres that you can."
"Three compounds must be selected for each race."
The maximum number of compounds for the season is five (5)."
"The tyre compounds must not be altered over the course of the season unless approved by the FIA"
In this way.. even if the competing tyre companies make harder/softer sets it will average out over the year and track to track. On some tracks you just can't get away with a tyre that is too soft or too hard. After a while, just like the cars the performance will converge. And the cycle repeats and we end up back at one supplier again. lol
Yeah. I just realized this! Yeah. updates must be allowed.
Remember the qualifying tyres. Lasting one lap.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑05 Aug 2017, 02:09http://www.autosport.com/news/report.ph ... d-for-2018
Hypersoft is coming!
What next? The "really soft, honest" the "I can't believe it's not softer"? Just call them soft, medium and hard, group them for the teams so A or 1 onwards for the increasing hardness of the compound types.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑05 Aug 2017, 02:09http://www.autosport.com/news/report.ph ... d-for-2018
Hypersoft is coming!
I totally agree. When the range is wrong, change the range, the range needs to be made two steps softer in my opinion. However, they need to do a couple of other changes for the construction as well, we need a compound that at the rear that has a larger contact patch to make it less peaky and much more forgiving when the limit of grip is exceeded so a driver can much more readily get the car back when the rear goes around.