Deadpool wrote: ↑04 Aug 2020, 05:01
Maybe in fact Pirelli's engineers should determine when which car should go to the pit stop, how many laps they can go with one set of tires, and it would be best to limit the speed in corners (sarcasm). "No,no, you silly boy, you can't drive at full throttle on that strait and try to overtake,debris are waiting in ambush and they'll catch you ..."
But that is exactly what the fuel use regs ‘encourage’ the teams to do. So the teams use multiple sensors (and sensor types) to ensure maximum knife-edge tyre performance (because that is where they prefer to extract lap-time from). If you ride on a knife-edge, occasionally you fall off (driver error, damage, hit ‘that’ kerb too often, etc, etc), this makes it easy to blame the tyres.
Tyres are a part of the issue that F1 has, but the teams ultimately control how they extract pace and lap-time from the car. They could brim the fuel, but that loses them time (although it would allow less lift/coast). Weight and aero are the biggest issues for the tyres as that determines the normal loading that they see.
Perspective - Understanding that sometimes the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.