thedutchguy wrote: ↑25 Jun 2019, 17:08I took this pic of the Ferrari SF90 Diffuser in France last friday morning, just before practice 1.
Obviously there are some teams that are struggling more than others to switch this tires... But, a change will probably be in detriment of those that are managing them.ENGINE TUNER wrote:Aren't these the best tires pirelli have ever brought for F1?
The temps at Canada and France were sky high and yet we barely heard anybody being asked to conserve tires or any tire failures.
Big heat wave in Europe right now, super high temps predicted in Spielberg, hopefully the tires won't fall apart like last year. If they don't then it is some proof that these tire are superior .
Was there any complaints from the team's about not being able to switch on the tires from the last 2 races?
Have there been any complaints about the tires the last 2 races when the track temps were high? I haven't heard much, except for maybe Haas.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jun 2019, 20:57Obviously there are some teams that are struggling more than others to switch this tires... But, a change will probably be in detriment of those that are managing them.
The teams spent a lot of money working and developing their cars for these tires... Changing them mid season seems unfair to those who got it right... If anything, the teams should be allow to test the thicker compound before it goes into effect.
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Agreed... I believe Hamilton stated that he couldn’t have followed Vettel as close as he did in Montreal on the older tires since those would have probably overheated.ENGINE TUNER wrote:Have there been any complaints about the tires the last 2 races when the track temps were high? I haven't heard much, except for maybe Haas.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jun 2019, 20:57Obviously there are some teams that are struggling more than others to switch this tires... But, a change will probably be in detriment of those that are managing them.
The teams spent a lot of money working and developing their cars for these tires... Changing them mid season seems unfair to those who got it right... If anything, the teams should be allow to test the thicker compound before it goes into effect.
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Disregarding any possible tire switch, ate these not the best performing pirelli tires that they have supplied since 2011? Pole and race lap records every weekend , minimal conservation, no failures. I really don't see any technical reason to go back to the thicker Guage tires except for maybe cold weather races.
Meanwhile Mario's probably quite happy to have "Pirelli" mentioned another million times while not having any intention of making a huge batch of new tyres and throwing away the ones he's already made, that don't blister on worldwide TVPirelli can only change its compounds if it identifies a safety concern, if the FIA requests it, or if 70% of teams are in favour of it.
"I had Kimis Sauber in front of my nose at Paul Ricard for the whole race. Although I rode in restless air, the tires held well and I came with a stop over the distance. I used to fall behind after a few laps because the tires overheated. That's where the thinner tread helped. "
Kimi Raikkonen also sees it that way. "Before, after a few laps, I would have had Nico's rest. But he was able to stay close throughout the race. Maybe that's also an indication that something has changed. "
Only Mercedes and McLaren seem to be against a possible change to 2018 spec tyres. Williams and Racing Point would just follow their engine supplier.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑27 Jun 2019, 21:08Have there been any complaints about the tires the last 2 races when the track temps were high? I haven't heard much, except for maybe Haas.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jun 2019, 20:57Obviously there are some teams that are struggling more than others to switch this tires... But, a change will probably be in detriment of those that are managing them.
The teams spent a lot of money working and developing their cars for these tires... Changing them mid season seems unfair to those who got it right... If anything, the teams should be allow to test the thicker compound before it goes into effect.
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Disregarding any possible tire switch, ate these not the best performing pirelli tires that they have supplied since 2011? Pole and race lap records every weekend , minimal conservation, no failures. I really don't see any technical reason to go back to the thicker Guage tires except for maybe cold weather races.
I did not see any mention of this in the post race interviews. VET was able to easily pass the McLarens and was closing the gap to VER the whole race. VER pushed hard most of the race, no mention of sliding, graining or tire conservation from him in his post race interview.GAS and RIC started on the reds.