He would have been dead last from leading a race, doesn't make sense. even if the car is fast and he could easily claw back the gap, we cannot say if he would crash with slower cars or get held up by the cars with high top speed.
Have you reviewed the evidence before your claims of irony? Check the previous times Pirelli investigations concluded in a bad batch or fundamental construction issue. Check the last failures gong back a few years. The circumstances and the actions taken. Needless to jump to conclusion because "but Christian Horner said."
What I mean is that you use essentially the same set of (lack of) evidence to claim it must be debris and that therefore Horner is fabricating stories. Or for that matter, use very, very thin threads of 'evidence' to conclude Gasly is deliberately being used to hinder Mercedes pit-stops.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 12:59Have you reviewed the evidence before your claims of irony? Check the previous times Pirelli investigations concluded in a bad batch or fundamental construction issue. Check the last failures gong back a few years. The circumstances and the actions taken. Needless to jump to conclusion because "but Christian Horner said."
A few years? Only last year both Max (at Imola) and Lewis and Valterri (at Silverstone) had the same issue ruin their races (Hamilton still won on 3 wheels). Still not reaching the conclusion that there is something wrong will only mean it will happen again. And it might just happen to your Lewis again this time. Could be anybody.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 12:59Have you reviewed the evidence before your claims of irony? Check the previous times Pirelli investigations concluded in a bad batch or fundamental construction issue. Check the last failures gong back a few years. The circumstances and the actions taken. Needless to jump to conclusion because "but Christian Horner said."
To me it's about driver safety more than anything else. Even though the 2 failures were at high speed, they were minor accidents because The cars where close to the walls before the accident and traveling parallel to the walls. Thus the G load experienced by the drivers when impacting the walls was low.
we can jump to any conclusion based on previous accidents caused by debris. Debris is broken pieces of carbon fiber, so there are no two equal pieces of debris, so there are no two equal damages caused by debris. One can instantly blow the tire, other can cause small damage so the tire can still work for some time, but when it reaches it´s maximum load at the straight (no fast corners in baku) due to the maximum downforce at maximum speed (no DRS) it fails.
Pirelli is running the tires on the edge, apparently sometimes slightly over it... it's racing, stuff should be on the edge. With the engines only "end of life" for three races at the season, we're gotten used to bulletproof cars. Tires are still end of life twice a race.Andres125sx wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 21:19we can jump to any conclusion based on previous accidents caused by debris. Debris is broken pieces of carbon fiber, so there are no two equal pieces of debris, so there are no two equal damages caused by debris. One can instantly blow the tire, other can cause small damage so the tire can still work for some time, but when it reaches it´s maximum load at the straight (no fast corners in baku) due to the maximum downforce at maximum speed (no DRS) it fails.
I´m not saying that´s what happened, only that we can´t know what happened, it could be caused by debris, or it could be a tire construction or design failure, we can´t know, and we probably will never know
Pirelly asking for higher pressures on friday is suspicious tough
Yes but by your own argument you can argue that the construction plays a role here. Since no two pieces of carbon are the same, the likelihood of two tires getting cut in exactly the same spot, and in the the same way, is virtually non existent.Andres125sx wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 21:19
we can jump to any conclusion based on previous accidents caused by debris. Debris is broken pieces of carbon fiber, so there are no two equal pieces of debris, so there are no two equal damages caused by debris. One can instantly blow the tire, other can cause small damage so the tire can still work for some time, but when it reaches it´s maximum load at the straight (no fast corners in baku) due to the maximum downforce at maximum speed (no DRS) it fails.
I´m not saying that´s what happened, only that we can´t know what happened, it could be caused by debris, or it could be a tire construction or design failure, we can´t know, and we probably will never know
Pirelly asking for higher pressures on friday is suspicious tough
We are all free to think, but I am always careful not to make statements of fact when I don't have all the facts. (if I do make hard statements better know that I am joking or in a silly seasob thread). And I am always prepared to admit being wrong.DChemTech wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 13:15What I mean is that you use essentially the same set of (lack of) evidence to claim it must be debris and that therefore Horner is fabricating stories. Or for that matter, use very, very thin threads of 'evidence' to conclude Gasly is deliberately being used to hinder Mercedes pit-stops.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 12:59Have you reviewed the evidence before your claims of irony? Check the previous times Pirelli investigations concluded in a bad batch or fundamental construction issue. Check the last failures gong back a few years. The circumstances and the actions taken. Needless to jump to conclusion because "but Christian Horner said."
Yes but we can check to see what the investigations concluded over the years and see what normally causes these failures.Sieper wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 16:33A few years? Only last year both Max (at Imola) and Lewis and Valterri (at Silverstone) had the same issue ruin their races (Hamilton still won on 3 wheels). Still not reaching the conclusion that there is something wrong will only mean it will happen again. And it might just happen to your Lewis again this time. Could be anybody.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 12:59Have you reviewed the evidence before your claims of irony? Check the previous times Pirelli investigations concluded in a bad batch or fundamental construction issue. Check the last failures gong back a few years. The circumstances and the actions taken. Needless to jump to conclusion because "but Christian Horner said."
Cuts on the same rear left!Pirelli has gathered remains of the tyres to conduct a thorough investigation, but the company’s Formula 1 boss Mario Isola has ruled out the possibility of a wear-related failure.
This is for several reasons, including the lack of warning before a sudden loss of pressure, the fact there was still adequate tread in the remains of both tyres, others running longer on sets of hards and that cuts were discovered in other tyres, including Lewis Hamilton’s rear-left from the second stint.
Good point actually, I think we have all noticed you have two dominant styles of posts; 1) inflammatory posts where you "use the data" to state something absolutely and when pushed, walk it back to defensible nonsense. 2) inflammatory posts where you "use the data" to state something absolutely and when pushed, hahaha it was a joke.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 23:25
We are all free to think, but I am always careful not to make statements of fact when I don't have all the facts. (if I do make hard statements better know that I am joking or in a silly seasob thread). And I am always prepared to admit being wrong.
Two tyres definitely don't need to be cut in the same spot to puncture... Not sure if you meant the same spot on the track.Edax wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 21:57Yes but by your own argument you can argue that the construction plays a role here. Since no two pieces of carbon are the same, the likelihood of two tires getting cut in exactly the same spot, and in the the same way, is virtually non existent.Andres125sx wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 21:19
we can jump to any conclusion based on previous accidents caused by debris. Debris is broken pieces of carbon fiber, so there are no two equal pieces of debris, so there are no two equal damages caused by debris. One can instantly blow the tire, other can cause small damage so the tire can still work for some time, but when it reaches it´s maximum load at the straight (no fast corners in baku) due to the maximum downforce at maximum speed (no DRS) it fails.
I´m not saying that´s what happened, only that we can´t know what happened, it could be caused by debris, or it could be a tire construction or design failure, we can´t know, and we probably will never know
Pirelly asking for higher pressures on friday is suspicious tough
Therefore if you see exactly the same failure mode it has to be at least affected by the design.
My guess is that they are still having the same issue that they reported at the British GP. Perhaps the process is triggered by a cut, but the main problem would be that the tire starts developing a growing subsurface hotspot by internal friction. In the past the belt would delaminate and fly off. But since they strengthened that area the failure moved to the edge of the belt.
Also the fact that you see almost no fiber pullout could be an indication that this area has been pretty hot (though this could also be caused by other reasons).