Cam wrote:So, let's get this right, Pirelli was asked to supply a tyre that Pirelli had no idea how it would react to a 2012 F1 car. That's what he's just stated. Nice one Pirelli, not only do you make crap F1 tyres, you actually had no idea how crap they'd be. So much for your QA. "she'll be right, throw them on - all for the show".
Cam wrote:Agreed. However its been Pirellis responses which has perturbed me the most. At each stage PIrelli have deflected any and all criticism. Turns out, regardless of job they were asked to do, they have underestimated the 2012 tyre and don't fully know how to work it. If they had said from the start 'hang on, we haven't tested these on a 2012 F1 car so we have no idea how they'll react", then there would be no problem (well, there would be but for an entirely other reason) - but that didn't occur.
Pirelli have indeed created a lottery. These tyres may be consistent on a 2010 car, but this is 2012 and to serve up tyres, which they admit they don't run as they expect, isn't really the 'pinnacle of motorsport' is it?
To know teams are throwing millions of dollars to understand a component that the manufacturer doesn't understand - typifies the utter wastage of cash and resources for no good reason in F1 and continuing to allow it to occur flies in the face of reducing costs.
But aren't Pirelli basically saying the same thing, that the best they could do was use a 2010 car and that they could not accurately predict how they would work on a 2012 car because the 2010 and 2012 cars were very different? As far as "crap" and quality control, I believe they are doing a magnificent job. Granted, the tires are unforgiving and work within a very tiny window unique to each compound, but each compound is consistent for the entire batch.
I would be miffed if, for instance, one set of softs worked differently than another set of softs, but they are consistent. That's actually a high level of quality control.
I strongly disagree on the submission of the concept that this is a "lottery". What is really going on is that the tires have an incredibly narrow operating window, and running outside of that results in massive performance drop-offs. It is an exceptionally difficult and complex task to understand all the variables and get it right for the entire race. When you combine it with having to run two different compounds for each race, that the weather can change, that each track has it's own unique grip and wear characteristics, the cars lose weight during the race, just to mention some variables and issues the engineers must deal with, it results in an incredibly complex puzzle.
The consequence of this complex and dynamic puzzle is that teams struggle to decide on which pit stop strategy is optimal, whether two, three or four stops is better, resulting in the "show" we fans are experiencing. It's not "lottery" or "luck", teams do know what happened and why (sometimes after the race, unfortunately). It's just incredibly, incredibly difficult to integrate all the variables into one equation that makes decisions simple and easy.
Personally, I like it . The level of strategy has made a quantum leap, far far beyond past levels of strategy. The result is that no one knows what is going to happen, not because it's a lottery, but because there are so many variables, and that the tires are so unforgiving.
Now we get down to brass tacks, that fans have different philosophies and concepts of what a Formula One race is supposed to be in essence. Many voice the opinion that it should be drivers and cars going 100% of their potential for the entire race. This is the root cause for all the unhappiness and discontent about the tires and certain regulations.
Although I respect opinions and do not think they are trash or "wrong", I disagree on this point. From day one, Formula One cars have been arguably the quickest cars in circuit racing. They were, and are, extremely exciting, sexy, loud, and fast. So the common perception is that they go flat out. But that isn't true, from day one it has also been about conservation of resources. A Formula One race is approximately 300 kilometers in distance, and in the past even longer.
One of the greatest drivers, Fangio, in his greatest drive in the 1957 German Grand Prix at Nürburgring, was a grand epic of 500 kilometers of cunning, courage, and conservation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1957_German_Grand_Prix
Jimmy Clark, also on the list of greats, was famous for his conservation of tires. You're a "great" for reasons other than sheer pace.
Alain Prost won may races and titles because of his cunning and conservation of resources. He often went easy at the beginning of the race to conserve his tires and brakes for the latter stages of the race. He also only drove as fast as he had to. Until Schumacher's run of records, Prost was the most successful driver in Formula One.
Racing should be decided on the track, not the court room.