It's not just a matter of "hurt their car", the lower pressures would most probably make everyone faster, but some moreso than others. It could be that Merc only gain half a second per lap while Ferrari gain 1sec, regardless it is still wrong for them to change the tire parameters during the season and even moreso during a race weekend for absolutely no reason at all. Pirelli did not lower the pressures for safety reasons, so in reality they have no reason to do so.
the are very accurate and simple ways to measure downforcehollowBallistix wrote: ↑01 Jun 2017, 16:37How did they validate that the down force levels were false ? Did they just compare it to what other teams were reporting & find it odd that one team was apparently reporting higher levels ?
What if Merc are actually achieving those levels of down force & now a blanket reduction in the tyre pressure will harm them ? Why mandate lower pressures anyway ? They made a massive fuss regarding low pressures for safety grounds last year, so if there's no issue now running them at the high or at the low end, why not just let the teams adjust pressures to extract the best performance from their package providing there's no "safety" concern.
Pirelli are just incompetent.
Could you please report some source affirming what you claim: that is to say that Pirelli mandated a minimum pressure based on preseason testing?ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 19:31
If Pirelli have mandated a minimum pressure from pre season testing going forward and then all of a sudden begin to progressively lower that minimum pressure they could be unfairly aiding 1(or more) teams over others. Merc could have designed/tuned their suspension and aero platform to the pirelli tires as they were run from pre-season testing and then all of a sudden pirelli begin to precipitously drop the minimum tire pressures on a race by race, or day by day basis giving an advantage to teams that did not tune their cars as well or as much.
Lower pressures(over a weekend) probably help everyone go faster, but they most certainly help some more than others, and that is wrong in a single tire series.
This is no different than when pirelli changed the construction of their tires mid 2013 that ended up favoring the RBR car.
The logic is to open the performance window of the tires as they learn more about them.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 20:23That is absurd, they wouldn't be "keeping pressures artificially high", they would be keeping the pressures consistent through the weekend. Unless there is a safety reason to lower the pressures(THERE IS NOT), there is no logic behind lowering the pressures.SR71 wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 19:20Pirelli is doing the opposite of favoritism.
They are opening the window for more teams to find performance.
Nobody is forcing a single team to run lower pressures.
If mercs performance was locked in high PSI they would be favoring Merc by keeping pressures artificially high.
The pressures have been run since pre-season testing and to suddenly change them and in the middle of the weekend is biased.
Your logic is absolutely flawed.
2013 there were 4 different teams that won in the first 10 races, pirelli changed the tires because of several high profile tire blow ups and RBR/VET went on to win every single race after that. Is that a conspiracy theory? In that case they changed the tire spec in the name of safety, what is their excuse now? They have no grounds to change the tire parameters, especially when it could favor one team more than the other.Stormy wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 02:52There are always conspiracy theories when it comes to the most efficient car. Ferrari just made a better car, simple as that. No Italian mystery here as Toto Wolf likes to say. Ferrari opted to use both of their racing drivers to test the new tires. Seb and Kimi did way more thousands of kilometers of testing with the new tires compared to VB and Lewis, especially Lewis who only made 50 laps of testing! Their illegal suspension was also banned and that may have influenced Merc's problems as well.
You are ranting and raving about a non issue. If Mercedes wants to run higher pressures then they are free to do so Pirelli has mandated minimum pressures not maximum pressures so all the teams that built their cars to maximize higher pressures can run them penalty free : ) whats the issue? Where was all this complaining when tire pressures were raised and Mercedes kept on winning?ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 04:392013 there were 4 different teams that won in the first 10 races, pirelli changed the tires because of several high profile tire blow ups and RBR/VET went on to win every single race after that. Is that a conspiracy theory? In that case they changed the tire spec in the name of safety, what is their excuse now? They have no grounds to change the tire parameters, especially when it could favor one team more than the other.Stormy wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 02:52There are always conspiracy theories when it comes to the most efficient car. Ferrari just made a better car, simple as that. No Italian mystery here as Toto Wolf likes to say. Ferrari opted to use both of their racing drivers to test the new tires. Seb and Kimi did way more thousands of kilometers of testing with the new tires compared to VB and Lewis, especially Lewis who only made 50 laps of testing! Their illegal suspension was also banned and that may have influenced Merc's problems as well.
The tire testing that the 3 mule cars did was supposedly completely blind. VET and/or Ferrari may not have even tested the tires that were chosen for 2017. There were 96 different prototype tires tested by pirelli on the mule cars, what percentage of those 96 do you think VET/ferrari tested? How would they know to design their car around any of those 96 different prototypes, especially if they didn't even test the final chosen spec. RBR designed their car around what they considered the prototype tire with the best characteristics by the data given to the teams by pirelli and have since admitted that they got it wrong. VET's and RAI's tire testing meant nothing towards the choosing of the 2017 tires, nor did it mean anything toward the design of the 2017 Ferrari.
The only valid point you have put forward is the FIA's reinterpretation of the Merc & RBR trick suspensions.
indeed they should as it only helps the team that provides the information. they cannot share anything.zac510 wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 12:16I can understand that a team might have given a higher downforce figure because they expected to reach that figure after some more development, but in the end have not. Perhaps it's not fraudulent information, but unintentionally misleading. In any case the design of the tyres and the design of the car are so integrated these days, I think it's entirely reasonable for Pirelli to expect to receive accurate information and data from the teams.
The point is he is not making any, pretty much ranting in most of his posts.Craigy wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 10:11Stop playing the person. Play the ball.motobaleno wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 22:431) it is clear that you don't really know how these things goes so I will no more reply to your claims but I kindly suggest you to study F1 technicalities and dynamics little deeper.
(Translation for non-English speakers: Stop attacking the person. Instead, discuss the points he's making)
There is no ranting, refute my points.LionKing wrote: ↑08 Jun 2017, 14:29The point is he is not making any, pretty much ranting in most of his posts.
The tires are the same tires, Pirelli has not changed them. Pirelli is just letting teams to use an operating range which has been shown to be safe so far with no blowups or no other evident issues.
Why should they artificially mandate higher minimum pressures if the tires can handle a broader range? As it has been repeated many many times, anyone who wishes can go above the minimum mandates pressures, can just do so.
Secondly the cars are not designed in February, but long time before that. No F1 tire rule that was tweaked in the last minute to hinder any team or another.