With a year of experience, and the ability to design the car around the tires and their working windows which are now well known, a lot of teams have a chance to gain serious pace. The difference in working the tires properly can be as high as half a second. Every year Pirelli have switched tires, every year teams have had a bit of a tire lottery. Sometimes the Pirellis agree with your chassis and sometimes they do not. Sometimes your chassis agrees with the tires on certain tracks sometimes they don't.
Agreedgodlameroso wrote: ↑10 Dec 2019, 18:31With a year of experience, and the ability to design the car around the tires and their working windows which are now well known, a lot of teams have a chance to gain serious pace. The difference in working the tires properly can be as high as half a second. Every year Pirelli have switched tires, every year teams have had a bit of a tire lottery. Sometimes the Pirellis agree with your chassis and sometimes they do not. Sometimes your chassis agrees with the tires on certain tracks sometimes they don't.
Now with all the data and machine learning these teams have at their disposal, I'm sure they can improve the suspension kinematics to work the tires better. They can manage the airflow around the tires better because of better models regarding tire deflection under loads. There is scope for both the field to converge and make the outcomes less predictable, and in such a tight battle, gaining a tenth can make a big difference to the pecking order.
I am not sure that we can blame Pirelli.
Tough when everyone voted for it.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑10 Dec 2019, 18:12I'd say the teams just don't want to learn new tyres for one year when they really want to have spare capacity focused on the 2021 regulations.
I'm waiting for the "FIA/Pirelli helping Mercedes again" conspiracy hypotheses to begin...
I think that it should be better, but if Pirelli starts modifying for the same GP respect to last year the minimum pressure, camber and selected compounds, I suppose that what was learned about the usage of tyres may be not so much useful.AMG.Tzan wrote: ↑11 Dec 2019, 12:51Don't you think that keeping the tires the same as 2019 will be better for competition? Teams already know how they work and won't have to learn them all over again in testing! And i think 2019 tires were just what F1 was asking for...not so much graining , drivers better able to attack without losing much on the tire front! Why change them? 2021 is really close after all...
Something tells me that 2020 will be a really close battle everywhere...Top 3 and midfield! We'll see what Mercedes has up their sleeve though...
I'm not sure if this will backfire on Pirelli. People will probably just think that the tyres are crap instead of questioning the teams setup and tyre usage... Also Pirelli has to state limits, else it'll probably kill a driver sooner or later when a tyre fails.NathanOlder wrote: ↑11 Dec 2019, 15:17Just let the teams run what pressure and camber they want. If they run too much camber or too low pressure and have a failure then its on the team and that team suffer with the DNF.
To counter that, Pirelli announce at the beginning of each race weekend the recommend tyre camber and pressures. The teams then have to publish what they do with their tyres. If they are not in the recommend windows, then its on the team.Tzk wrote: ↑11 Dec 2019, 17:23I'm not sure if this will backfire on Pirelli. People will probably just think that the tyres are crap instead of questioning the teams setup and tyre usage... Also Pirelli has to state limits, else it'll probably kill a driver sooner or later when a tyre fails.NathanOlder wrote: ↑11 Dec 2019, 15:17Just let the teams run what pressure and camber they want. If they run too much camber or too low pressure and have a failure then its on the team and that team suffer with the DNF.