I'm surprised the prestige of being the F1 tyre company is worth the relentless battering the company gets from the press/fans/teams etc? I'd be in favour of another tyre war, but then I'm always in favour of competition and development variables.Shrieker wrote: ↑15 Nov 2017, 14:02Next year: Pirelli brings hypersoft. It is deemed 'too soft' in places.
With the development of the new cars and increasing downforce, the teams run into problems.
A call is made to make the tires a bit more durable.
Pirelli obliges. In 2019 the hypersoft is deemed too hard. Teams can 1 stop using the hyper and ultrasoft tires.
Hence, for 2020 Pirelli brings another softer tire that will "spice up" racing. They 'introduce' the super-duper soft tire.
Rinse, repeat.
all the tyre situation will do is mean, Driver A pits 2 times, Driver B pits 1 time. Driver A pulls a 7sec gap, pits, comes out 14 sec behind, closes to withing 7 seconds of Driver B as Driver B pits. Driver A pits again and is 7 seconds behind Driver B, closes up and makes an easy pass due to the tyre advantageKeiKo403 wrote: ↑15 Nov 2017, 13:41Seems like Pirelli are in a tyre war with themselves over who can produce the softest rubber. So long as it promotes better racing I don't care. Softer rubber can generally mean more stop allowing different strategies, however I want to see on track overtakes (without silly DRS) and not drivers getting under/over cut from pit stops.
This.NathanOlder wrote: ↑14 Nov 2017, 12:14As for a new compound name, just move the names down a compound so the new tyre is called the ultrasoft, the old ultrasoft is now named supersoft all the way up so the old Hard tyre is now named SuperHard or UltraHard.
Otherwise we could have a race where the SuperSoft will be thehardest slowest tyre to be on. How does that make any sense.
The tyres are just reeaally soft! No kidding. It just does not sit well the gimmik of calling a soft tyre - which is actually soft to the touch - hard. That is just nonsense.OneAlex wrote: ↑16 Nov 2017, 15:06This.NathanOlder wrote: ↑14 Nov 2017, 12:14As for a new compound name, just move the names down a compound so the new tyre is called the ultrasoft, the old ultrasoft is now named supersoft all the way up so the old Hard tyre is now named SuperHard or UltraHard.
Otherwise we could have a race where the SuperSoft will be thehardest slowest tyre to be on. How does that make any sense.
As soon as I saw the poll (and btw it should be called hypersoft but that's besides the point) the amplifier scene from Spinal Tap popped into my head: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xgx4k83zzc
If you need a soft, supersoft, ultrasoft AND a hypersoft tyre, then there's something wrong with the tyres.
Quite looking forward to the next tyre they introduce after the hypersoft though. I'm hoping they go full Spaceballs and call it Ludicrous Soft.
They tried that already in 2011. Option was overheating, prime was graining because to cold. So drivers were cruising/saving their option (soft tire) and did a very short stint on the much slower prime (hard tire). No fun, bad for entertainment.marmer wrote: ↑18 Nov 2017, 16:04Missing a compound out might be a way to go in the future. Having such a large speed and length of tyre will make optimum choices impossible to figure out. Soft and hard tyre all you need but soft would be around two seconds a lap faster this would make teams really think about doing soft to start then hard to finish or multiple softs and allow teams to not stop so they could start on hards and try and make the end of the race. While top ten must start on qualifying tyre like they do now.
This would create different strategies. If the hard was designed correctly it would run out of effectively pace just before the end to force good management.
The soft would only last 10-15 laps but being so much faster it would make up for the extra pit stop
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
That's my understanding too, yes.
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
Exactly my thoughts. Teams hardly(no pun) used even the medium this year...