Miguel wrote:Jersey Tom wrote:TRICKLE69 wrote:Guaranteed that whoever comes on as tire supplier will have a VERY HARD time getting the tires to last(except maybe Michelin).
Disagree.
Jersery Tom, could you go a bit more in depth? Many of us have read insightful posts of yours regarding tyres. So, unless you are in a position where you can't tell (i.e. working for such a company), could you give us (at least me) more detail about:
- Realistic companies to substitute Bridgestone. You have already discarded Kumho, probably because it's too small. What about Goodyear, Pirelli, Michelin and others?
- How likely is it to see performance degradation in 2011? I suppose not much, because many talented people work outside bridgestone and the tyre war end already brought a slower tyre.
- Is the two compound rule going to stay if F1 switches suppliers?
Regarding the last point, I'd like to hear your point of view regarding the use of multiple compounds throughout the race. I do dislike this rule, since I feel a further, unneeded, set up compromise must be done. We've disagreed in the past, so it's possible I'll see a counterpoint.
I just don't see why tire wear would be so difficult to manage. There are other race series with much more abusive conditions and race tracks than F1.
With regard to realistic companies.. the fact is, whoever would take the spot would have one year to develop a full line of race tires, dry and wet, that have the right performance and safety margin. That's a large R&D investment, particularly if you're starting totally from scratch (as Kuhmo would).
There are a number of companies
or brands who have done F1 or comparable open wheel before that would have a starting point.
I do work for a large race tire manufacturer, so all I can say there are the obvious publicly-known facts. The big driver will just be.. whatever deal FOM wants to work out.. is it worth doing. In a still poor economic environment (even for tire giants such as Goodyear and Michelin), is FOM offering a reasonable deal or is it a terrible business decision?
With regard to performance degradation, who knows. Depends what you mean by performance. Raw speed? Drivability? A tire that's easy to tune your car to? Depends who comes in and how serious they are about it. Could be worse than the current Bridgestone lineup, could be much better. Anything's possible.
Hard to say with the two compound thing. The way F1 has gone with it is to make interesting racing, and Bridgestone was asked to bring two tires basically that they wouldn't ordinarily bring if they were trying to compete with someone. A tire that's appropriate, and a tire that's really not appropriate.
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.