Exactly, why can't Pirelli just make a tyre that never wears when subject to friction, doesn't change elasticity when heat is applied to it, yet offers grip on a downforce-loaded racing car?
What are these incompetents at Pirelli doing?
Exactly, why can't Pirelli just make a tyre that never wears when subject to friction, doesn't change elasticity when heat is applied to it, yet offers grip on a downforce-loaded racing car?
There are 3 key factors that have "destroyed/robbed us" of great racing.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑01 Nov 2018, 14:34But what I don't get is - people complain when there's 1 stop races and people complain when the tires degrade? Doesn't seem to me like there's a happy middle ground!!! We as fans need to come to an agreement what we want.
You bring up great points. I agree #1 is a problem. #2 is also a problem but I am not sure if requiring mandatory all 3 compounds to be used is a good solution though I would think maybe it's worth a shot and seeing how it goes. Definitely agree on #3. I was harping on that since they introduced the 3 x PU limit for the season. I don't think it saves on costs cause the R&D needed to achieve that will result in heavier cars, and more expense. And of course like you said poorer racing because people just keep turning the damn things down. Great post.GPR -A wrote: ↑01 Nov 2018, 18:25There are 3 key factors that have "destroyed/robbed us" of great racing.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑01 Nov 2018, 14:34But what I don't get is - people complain when there's 1 stop races and people complain when the tires degrade? Doesn't seem to me like there's a happy middle ground!!! We as fans need to come to an agreement what we want.
1. Aero - Increased turbulent wake that induces increased understeer to the following car, as the following car has ever increasing dependency on the complex aerodynamics at the front of the car.
2. Tyres - The stupidity of trying to create high degrading tyres to create racing has lead to teams burning 100s of millions of dollars in understanding the tyres and building complex solution to help them in better managing tyre life.
- Drivers have to back off from constant attack as turbulent wake destroys tyres.
- Make everlasting tyres and make it mandatory to use all 3 compounds in races! Pirelli anyway brings 3 compounds to the races. Stop making tyres a rocket science.
3. Limited PUs - It has not served anyone's purpose. Too much of conservatism on PU components has destroyed the show. FIA to benchmark PU performance and allow the weaker PU manufacturers to catch up until the difference is around 5% between different PUs, until then freeze the top performing PUs. Once the weaker manufacturers catch up, then freeze the development, which reduces the R&D and manufacturing costs and then allow as many PUs as a team wants to use.
Smaller teams have never made significant contribution to F1 ever. So, don't waste energy on trying to help them to make the playing field even for them. Let them go and then allow the bigger teams to run an extra car.
Mandating 3 compounds in race ensures there would definitely be 2 stops in the races. That means, there would be opportunity to varying strategies and the Safety Car impact would be larger. When the two stops become mandatory, then there is no premium on saving tyres, which means the teams have to get as much performance as they can within a smaller window. You would then NOT have leading cars running conservatively for like 30-40 laps.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑01 Nov 2018, 18:31You bring up great points. I agree #1 is a problem. #2 is also a problem but I am not sure if requiring mandatory all 3 compounds to be used is a good solution though I would think maybe it's worth a shot and seeing how it goes. Definitely agree on #3. I was harping on that since they introduced the 3 x PU limit for the season. I don't think it saves on costs cause the R&D needed to achieve that will result in heavier cars, and more expense. And of course like you said poorer racing because people just keep turning the damn things down. Great post.
The current Pirelli tyres are pretty good on that point actually. I was watching Barcelona 2012 on Classic F1 just last night and there was a proper goat track (as Brundle put it), we haven't seen anything like that in the last few seasons. Conversely as I was walking Suzuka last month there were hardly any marbles to be found.
So be it! Better than grandma driving. What you said could have happened last year also, but it hasn't! Because of highly durable tyres of last year, the Hypersoft was introduced for this year! What has that served? See what happened in the opening stint of Singapore?
The idea of somehow putting the faster car behind, is just ludicrous. I don't think the people who understand racing, wants overtakes that are pointless. The idea of racing is where there are no holds barred dog chase between two or multiple cars, whether it results in an overtake or not is of lesser importance. Today, bad aero, conserving PU, conserving tyres and what not, has limited the dog chase. Nobody wants to see dozens of pointless overtakes.Wynters wrote: ↑02 Nov 2018, 00:39The only way to get overtaking is to have faster cars behind slower ones. Given a sniff of data, all the top teams will focus in on the same strategy so you'll have processional racing only made 'exciting' due to mistakes, as we see now. So you either need to increase mistakes (lottery winner), artifically put faster cars behind slower ones (who will let them through so as not to compromise their race against the other people at their level) or artifically increase/decrease the speeds of cars (just like a computer game and 'rubber banding').
Don't get lost by creating a self conceived web of thoughts. I said "smaller teams", not current back markers. Smaller teams meaning, people who barely meet ends just to be on the grid.
He had literally zero chance at Verstappen before the pitstop, he was pushing and Verstappen was cruising. Vettel's left front looked like it was about to undo it's own wheel nut, jump over the halo and start beating Vettel in the head till he stopped the car because of the abuse Vettel had inflicted on it. IT's quite amazing that a left front looking that poor really didn't effect his lap times almost at all. Seemed to be almost all about rear not sliding out in corners and traction to get the speed down. But if that left front actually went then his race is over and frankly how bad it looked I think there was a real chance of that.
Because they didn't degrade, they literally didn't work for ~80% of the cars. If Ham pushed harder and was faster and in doing so used up his tires faster, that is degradation we want. What we had was everyone but RBR and Ferrari completely unable to push at all AND their tires wore out much faster than those two teams.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑01 Nov 2018, 14:34But what I don't get is - people complain when there's 1 stop races and people complain when the tires degrade? Doesn't seem to me like there's a happy middle ground!!! We as fans need to come to an agreement what we want.
Vettel was fastest man on the track at that moment. He was gaining 7 tents on Max, and his tires were 4 laps younger(although probably used harder).drunkf1fan wrote: ↑02 Nov 2018, 10:05He had literally zero chance at Verstappen before the pitstop, he was pushing and Verstappen was cruising. Vettel's left front looked like it was about to undo it's own wheel nut, jump over the halo and start beating Vettel in the head till he stopped the car because of the abuse Vettel had inflicted on it. IT's quite amazing that a left front looking that poor really didn't effect his lap times almost at all. Seemed to be almost all about rear not sliding out in corners and traction to get the speed down. But if that left front actually went then his race is over and frankly how bad it looked I think there was a real chance of that.
As it was, Ricciardo was getting a huge amount of defensive help in that almost every time Vettel got to be in DRS Ricciardo also had slipstream and DRS for most of the straight. With the way Vettel closed down a minor error in S2 a lap or two before the failure I think Vettel was getting 2nd the first time they had a 2-3 lap window without backmarkers, one lap to get really close, second lap to pass him.
Ferrari took the safe option to make sure he finished and make sure he didn't have a tire failure and was the right call. Sure they needed the win for the WDC, but they needed the finish for the WCC and made absolutely the right call.