WhiteBlue wrote:It has been confirmed by Bridgestone that the underlying safety problem is a construction that was unfit for turn 8 at Istanbul. They improved it for this year but still not sufficiently for safe use. How much scientific proof do you need? Bridgestone have agreed that they screwed up. It may not be their fault because the dynamics were of novel type and the level of downforce this year unknown. the fact remains they still don't have a safe enough tyre. So they have put a usage limit on one competitor to prevent a failure.
Do you expect McLaren to come forward and say they don't know how to set up their cars? I reckon you can wait a very long time to get that kind of data. Besides I have my doubt that setup had a lot to do with the problem. Bridgestone said it was the lateral forces applied repetitively at high turn in rates going anti clock wise. That is a function of the track, the downforce of the car and the driving style. Hamilton just has the bad luck that his car has the highest downforce and he has the highest turn in rate.
I'm not good at setup at all but I can read the manufacturers publication. They do not mention setup as a influential factor to the failures and damages they found last year. I think that you should explain how in your view McLaren could have reduced the forces by a different setup.
How much proof do I need? How about more than one driver, that's had tire problems
two years running at the same track in the same turn, being advised that their car is abusing the tires to the point of failure.
Running high amounts of downforce, or higher amounts than others, means to me that the mechanical setup/car design of the car is lacking in some way. Again, look at Ferrari. They either have a much better aero configuration, or better mechanical design/ setup to be the fastest in a straight line and yet not have any tire woes attributed to turn 8.
What do I think McLaren could do to combat this? Take a good hard look at their high speed aero department. Find ways to make it more efficient so that they don't have to crank on the downforce. Improve the mechanical grip or whatever it is that allows Ferrari to use softer tires much longer than they can. Find out how to avoid using so much camber on Lewis' car so that he isn't putting so much force into the right front and abusing it. Work with Lewis to be less violent on his turn in, help him adapt to the car better. ALL drivers can be better and learn new skills or improve their skills daily. If they don't believe that, then their name is Ralf Schumacher.
Fernando had to do this with the McLaren, remember that his Renault was setup for his infamous turn in and aggressiveness. They worked with him to iron out the kinks so he didn't destroy his tires, and it got them 2 WDC and 2 WCC to show for it.
Personally, I think that he didn't take the outstanding opportunity to learn from Fernando. Instead he took the info he was given from Fernandos side of the garage and just used it instead of studying it for his own good. The improvements at Renault speak volumes about the talents of Alonso and what kind of info he can give to the team so they together can improve the overall performance of the car. All last season he spent valuable time dodging questions about all the bullshit directed at Alonso and acting the innocent victim of his ire instead of studying what makes Alonso such a great driver. And that is showing in the smallest of details of his driving. I don't think he should copy him, and I think that seeing his adaptation to the new car and tires could help. But I find it hard to believe it's solely a tire issue when Fernando went only two races before winning after his switch from Michelin to Bridgestone. Not to mention switching to a totally alien team to him and miss winning a 3rd straight championship by a single solitary point.
That was a little off topic. Sorry. But I think it's valid because if Lewis would have paid a little more mind to the skill Alonso has, he may not have even had these problems. Not to say he couldn't figure them out on his own. He is truly a great talent and I don't deny it. There was just waaayyy too much info to be learned from him to spend all season acting the good guy.
WhiteBlue wrote:
The problem only appears in Turkey and turn 8. That is material! The place is unique and this should be recognised by the participants of this debate. So please do not argue that the problem did not happen elsewhere.
I mentioned China because it was another example of Lewis being harder on his tires than his teammate. That is completely relevant to this discussion because Heikki was not advised to changed his strategy,
from the very beginning, like Lewis was. Yes there is a limit to how long you can use any given set of tires, and they were trying to make a competitive strategy after his 1st lap stop. I also mentioned China because his teammate Alonso had no such isses, leading me to believe that Lewis is much harder on his tires overall leading to the failure.
And if they changed last years spec to be more resistant to chunking, and had no other serious issues with another driver but Lewis this year and had no repeats of what happened last year, then what does that mean? Should we design tires so hard in the sidewall they don't flex
at all? Most of the suspension is in the tires on an F1 car. How far do they need to go? How hard do they make it? How many teams do they have to saddle with the burden of changing specs/side wall strength/ carcass changes to cope with one teams or ones drivers problems?
When do they draw the line and say, "Look. If everyone else can race on them just fine and win races, why can't you? Figure it out and quit pointing the finger for your lack of (insert whatever cause here)." He had a problem that didn't affect anyone else. End of story. It's his and McLarens job to figure out what changes need to be made so they can use them effectively like all the other teams.
WhiteBlue wrote:I don't see what this has to do with Ferrari and the use of the prime, Ray. This issue is about the carcasse design and not about the compound. Bridgestone have confirmed that the problem had nothing to do with the compound. We need to distinguish between wear problems and a design problem where the tyre isn't capable to to take the loads that drivers legitimately apply.
I mentioned this not because of the compound, but because Ferrari has gotten their car to be able to handle a softer tire for longer. Softer tires will wear out more quickly than harder ones, so you have to take care of them more. That is a setup issue/car design issue that they have been able to solve, which McLaren have yet to do.
I still cannot correlate one teams problems with using the tires competitively with a safety issue. There has to be a point where the team has to figure out an effective way to use the rubber they are given like every other team has. There is no tire issue. All the other teams coping and having a very fast car without a failure proves that. Handicapping the others is not the solution. If Ferrari,
I compare the two only because they are at the top of the pile, can use them to great affect without issues then McLaren needs to do more work. To say it's unfair or dangerous is foolish. The only blowout because of turn 8 has fallen squarely on Lewis. And I may be wrong, but I haven't seen another tire problem because of it.