WhiteBlue wrote:It depends what you ask the tyre supplier to do. If they continue to ask for very small operating windows and very specific properties that will support a certain entertainment concept it may be asking too much. F1 needs to accept a robust tyre with a wide operating window and maybe one stop only. That is not a fundamental problem when you expect a lot of excitement from the shake up. But typically F1 manages to shoot itself in the foot and why should that change next year.
Pirellli will not offer such tyres because it is not in their interest. A narrow operating window creates tyre talk and they Need that for their PR.
I would say you are wrong on all accounts if you weren't contradicting yourself. I mean: are Pirelli "offering" the tyres or are they "asked" to provide certain tyres? Let's leave that and start with the last clear sentence.
One: tyre manufacturer has little to do with creating policies and type of tyres they're supplying. They are
a supplier and would provide any type of tyres FIA/Ecclestone/teams (including Red Bull and they should take some responsibility for it) would require of them. To be fair and thorough company's involvement may depend on tyre role in racing but it's marginally important in this discussion.
Two: current direction of tyre role in F1 was created before Pirelli entered based on state of F1 and not PR reasons. When it comes to bigger differences between the compounds remember 2009 Australia for example? After the race there were calls that difference was too big and "dangerous" but the trend was set. Not by Pirelli of course. Other examples: Canada 2010 or even Spa 2009, fastest car in the race - RB - starting eighth, although this one had more to do with a weather or first year of aero changes. The part about knowing everything about tyres and processional racing related to the aero doesn't need to be explained.
Thirdly: after seeing blanket statement like "F1 needs to accept a robust tyre with a wide operating window and maybe one stop only" some basics need to repeated:
1. No refuelling - every time you talk about degrading tyres remember no refuelling, tyres NEED to be a factor, no doubt about it, you can't separate the two at the moment. To what extend and how is a different story.
2. Related to the above: obvious technical sophistication that can't be compared to any era of F1 and leads to equalisation, under current rules, no matter what tyres are over time the trend is for less pitstops. And F1 doesn't need to accept anything, with your "robust" tyres the trend could go towards "half" a pitstop not one.
Also comparing Bridgestones and Pirellis makes no sense because the latter is "new" every season. Wait 3 seasons of set regulations and draw the comparisons, outside of nursing tyres techniques results pitstop-wise and with managing degradation might be similar. The problem with tyres is F1 changes and adjusts, you can't get the tyres right to some ideal place. Not having appropriate testing car is only part of the problem, that's why we have adjustments third season in a row.
Second part: PR noise about the tyres is created solely by the teams (usually Red Bull) to excuse results, hide incompetence and force changes that suit their design. It's not about care for the sport but competitive advantage.
To suggest that such publicity like in the beginning of the last two seasons or the one related to Mercedes test is sought after by any company in the world is insane. To use an analogy, it's like saying that if Red Bull is in F1 for marketing reasons than Silverstone 2010 that resulted in slogans like "Red Bull gives you someone else's wings" was good for their brand image. Or Turkey crash, or Malaysia 2013 win stealing. Following your logic they would continue to repeat it, in the end it did create a lot of PR attention. Only the wrong kind of attention.
That's why Red Bull's lobbying works and have resulted in a shift of approach in compound choices. To some extend only I hope, some changes had to be made on technical grounds (like I don't know, Bahrain?).