In my reading the discussion has centred round non engineering concepts of modernity or history.smellybeard wrote: ↑24 Apr 2019, 00:46Most of the pros and cons you mention are engineering reasons.
From a historical context the cars being referred to had a much lower duty cycle in comparison to today’s F1. In crude terms today’s cars have twice the power, 50% more weight and their cornering and braking accelerations are much higher, I could research how much higher but it wouldn’t change my point.
Another difference, and germane to your original post, smaller diameter wheels ride bumps less well and today’s drivers treat the savage kerbs of today’s circuits as though they are the main carriageway of yesteryear. And small wheels with low profile tyres, with necessarily less scope for tyre deflection, would be worse than those with high profile.
Today’s engineers have more time, money, expertise, tools and data than their forebears and to date have resisted tyre changes, probably due to the last, data, but also the expertise and tools they have developed to exploit that. So not necessarily resisting for absolute, clean sheet engineering, but the reality of today’s incremental engineering. Who knows what the transient forces would be on the kerbs at the A1 Ring?
So my opinion is that smaller diameter front tyres which, to preserve space for brakes and suspension,would need to be lowish profile would likely be hard pressed to make the duty cycle of today’s cars. They would I would think be popular with the aerodynamicists, but I doubt they’d make the cars quicker overall.