Because the rules forbid them from doing so. That would require active aero and that is not allowed.
I wasn’t being serious. It’s the equivalent of why don’t Pirelli make tyres that will keep functioning no matter how much they’re abused.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Dec 2019, 19:24Because the rules forbid them from doing so. That would require active aero and that is not allowed.
Ah.henry wrote: ↑11 Dec 2019, 19:31I wasn’t being serious. It’s the equivalent of why don’t Pirelli make tyres that will keep functioning no matter how much they’re abused.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Dec 2019, 19:24Because the rules forbid them from doing so. That would require active aero and that is not allowed.
What were teams and tyre manufacturers doing before 2015? Yes they didnot set any pressure limits or camber limits or toe in limits on the tyres in the 65 years of F1 history until 2015. It is only a way to hide how low quality tyres Pirelli produces. Just make good quality tyres then they wont need any band aid fixes.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.
For the only time in F1's history, the tyre manufacturer and teams aren't allowed to do proper testing. Do you think Bridgestone and Michelin would have produced the tyres of the early 2000s in tbe current environment? No way. Bridgestone was developing (and testing) tyres for Ferrari on an almost race by race basis. They'd test at Fiorano and then select the best tyres for the races.siskue2005 wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 08:52in the 65 years of F1 history until 2015. It is only a way to hide how low quality tyres Pirelli produces. Just make good quality tyres then they wont need any band aid fixes.
Excellent pointsJust_a_fan wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 10:01For the only time in F1's history, the tyre manufacturer and teams aren't allowed to do proper testing. Do you think Bridgestone and Michelin would have produced the tyres of the early 2000s in tbe current environment? No way. Bridgestone was developing (and testing) tyres for Ferrari on an almost race by race basis. They'd test at Fiorano and then select the best tyres for the races.siskue2005 wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 08:52in the 65 years of F1 history until 2015. It is only a way to hide how low quality tyres Pirelli produces. Just make good quality tyres then they wont need any band aid fixes.
The FIA have handed Pirelli a knotted rope and asked them to untie it with only one hand.
But the technology should also move forward, we cannot keep saying the tyres from 12 to 15 years ago were the best in f1. Every single thing in f1 has jumped leaps and bounds expect for tyres. It has got to do with budget of pirelli, they are not into too much R & D or not into taking any risks or not into making any progress or rather incompetent..... every year we hear that to compensate for higher dowforce we are going one step harder! and also raising the pressure by some psi.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 17:07Indeed so. The heaviest F1 cars ever with as much downforce as an F1 car has ever produced, with PUs that are as powerful as any before over a race distance.
The former makes the latter more difficult. That's the point.siskue2005 wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 19:19
Granted there are limitations due to limited testing, but pirelli should also have made better quality tyres.
Ah, the real reason comes to light...blame Pirelli for Mercedes's success. Yeah, that'll be it.siskue2005 wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 19:19This has really impacted all teams, and one of the reason no one has been able to beat Mercedes and also making most races boring.
If u have seen my posts, i am Merc and Lewis fan ... what i meant to say is that the constant rules change every year and regular tyre compund changes every year has not given any stability to the rules, which means that the gap between teams increases or stays the same and has been one of the reasonJust_a_fan wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 20:33Ah, the real reason comes to light...blame Pirelli for Mercedes's success. Yeah, that'll be it.siskue2005 wrote: ↑12 Dec 2019, 19:19This has really impacted all teams, and one of the reason no one has been able to beat Mercedes and also making most races boring.
I'm also amazed that Pirelli are still doing this. If I were them I'd have long ago told the FIA that I no longer wish to supply tyres for the sport any more. They can't make the tyres they'd be capable of and get insulted by media and fans alike for doing what they were asked.
Really? Back in the day they won the title several years in a row.