PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑04 Aug 2020, 16:32
Regardless I think there is more the failures than simple wear but alas it is just the initial findings so far. I think it is a political stance to show the teams that they must abide by Pirelli when new tyres are offered!
Pirelli doesn't have a leg to stand on in this regard, as they had no problem with using the 2019 tires this year. At the very least this is another example of them being very poor at ensuring the tires can last the number of laps they quote.
See this I posted yesterday.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/pire ... e/4608851/
In a statement, Pirelli said it had input into the decision and that "several different factors" were taken into account.
Pirelli elaborated: "The teams will no longer have to modify the designs of their 2020 cars, which would otherwise have been necessary to accommodate the different profile of the 2020 tyre construction.
"This will now allow the teams to continue the development of their 2020 cars – which are already at an advanced stage – uninterrupted.
"The use of the 2019 tyres also guarantees the teams stability, with the advantage of using a well-known product during the final season of the current regulations."
The rejected tyres will have been compatible with lower pressures, but sticking with the 2019 spec will likely mean they will have to be upped, as indicated by Pirelli chief Mario Isola in Abu Dhabi.
"If we stay on the current construction the only the only thing we can do, the only tool we have is pressure," Isola said.
"What is on the table is exactly this - we can stay on 2019 [tyres] accepting that pressure is raised according to the performance of the cars, and probably we have more degradation and more overheating."