Manoah2u wrote:The FIA doesn't have to do too much about this, it is Pirelli who is to blame.
Pirelli changed structure from kevlar to steel, and have created tires that in the entire history of the sport has never
been seen so dangerous. They blame it as if their hands are tied due to testing restrictions, however, it looks more
like pirelli is trying to use the cheapest and weakest material [possibly the cheapest] to see how far they can stretch that,
essentially resulting in research material they can put to use on their tires for 'normal' road cars [to understand how to use the least and cheapest to get the biggest bucks].
No, FIA asked Pirelli to build tyres that degrade faster than 2012 ones. That´s what they did, and now eveybody blames Pirelli because they did what they were asked to do
How many problems did Lotus have with Pirelli this year? None. And Force India? None. So it´s not the tyres, it´s some teams that built their cars without considering the tyres they were going to use.
Maybe Pirelli went a bit too far tough, but they did what they were aked to do. I guess building a tyre that last X laps must not be easy, because the car where it´s mounted will change the duration drastically, so they must do a guess about the average F1 car, an average about how much F1 cars will demand to the tyre.
At the end of 2012 FIA said they wanted more pit-stops for 2013, so the tyres should be softer and the cars should handle the tyres more gently.... or that´s what should have happened. But if Pirelli build the tyres considering the teams will build their cars to handle the tyres more gently, some do it (Lotus, FI...) but some don´t (Red Bull, Mercedes...) then is´t just impossible for Pirelli to hit the nail
So IMHO Pirelli did what they were asked to do, while some teams didn´t. But even when you should blame those teams, they can´t change the car drastically mid-seasson, so it was Pirelli who had to change his product, even when the product that didn´t match 2013 specs were not the tyres, but some F1 cars
Manoah2u wrote: however, it is completely unacepptable and the lack of testing does in no way defend the extreme danger and lack of respect of human [driver] life that is the result of Pirelli's complete sham and redicilous product that supposedly is a 'tire'.
It's not that Pirelli could not make a good, safe, tire - clearly it isn't their number 1 priority - which is mind-blowingly mad.
IF pirelli's first priority would be, as it should, to guarantee driver safety, then these extreme amounts of tire failure would have never happened, and pirelli would have adequately responded.
OMG, are you serious??
Are you really saying a tyre manufacturer does not care about their product being safe??
You should think twice about posting something like this, safety is first concern of any tyre manufacturer. And maybe it´s not because they care about the drivers, but they only care about their company public image, because if a tyre is proved to be unsafe, first and probably only affected (tracks and F1 cars are really safe even with worst crashes) will the the tyre manufacturer, whose public image will fall down to hell and their sales will be massively affected. So the reason really doesn´t matter, safety IS tyre manufacturers first priority.
But if they have to suppose F1 teams will build their cars to handle the tyres gently and even so the tyres must last few laps, but some teams build their cars to demand the tyres too much, then Pirelli can do nothing but praise for their tyres to do not blow out
Manoah2u wrote:Instead, the drivers and teams themselves threatened to boycot because pirelli didn't do their part.
No, the teams did the only thing they could do, think about their drivers safety. If the reason is his own car design didn´t match the announced specs for 2013, that really doesn´t matter at that point. Safety first, even if the safety problem was caused by yourself
Manoah2u wrote:The only thing I cant 'blame' FIA is that they haven't banned or booted Pirelli, reprimanded them or warned them officially,
and have IMHO not put enough effort for other brands to replace Pirelli due to their facade.
That would have been the most hypocritical decision I would have ever seen, first ask them to build soft tyres, then banning him for building soft tyres
Manoah2u wrote:
FIA should implement a mandatory test where officials independent of Pirelli conduct a safety test. I am sure there are enough smart minds that know how to test this, I think even Discovery's MythBusters could invent something without having the need to drive a fashionably 2013 F1 car in real life. Plenty of computer and real life simulation materials to properly test the tires.
No, nothing can substitude real life testing. Asphalt conditions vary too much and tyre wear depend mainly on this, how old it is, how much rubber does it have, what temperature, how much dirt.... you can´t predict real life conditions
See what happened to Philip Island GP, both MotoGP and Moto2 races were a lot shorter than usual because tyre wear was way way higher than expected and tyres didn´t last not even half a race distance in MotoGP. There you can blame the tyre manufacturer, because it was a problem any team had, so it was the tyres and the lack of testing on a track with new asphalt, but on F1 they were only some teams, so the tyres were not the part failing...
Manoah2u wrote:I highly doubt Michelin's Bugatti Veyron Tires weren't tested upon safety and strenght before they put them on the car.
Imagine a delamination on a veyron at 400+kph. 'Yeah it's Volkswagon's fault, they didn't give us tonnes of veyrons to test with, so we are not to blame, let's see the results, maybe bugatti fitted the tire backwards or didn't put the pressure in that we said they should do". P.Hembery logic.
Actually, Michelin´s Bugatti Veyron tires don´t last for more than 60km at full speed, so if you go 100km full speed with it you will probably blow out some tyre and kill yourself.
Do we blame Michelin, or do we blame you because you didn´t follow their instructions?
Same with F1, everybody was told to build their products for more pit-stops this year, some did it (Pirelli, Lotus, Force India, etc.) and some didn´t, so let´s blame the part who didn´t, and it´s not Pirelli, or at least not only Pirelli, I can agree they maybe went too far, but if all the teams would have done their job, just using the harder compounds the seasson would have been problem free
Manoah2u wrote:
Pirelli has zero right to be angry. The drivers dodging life-threatening tire debris due to pirelli's fault have the right to be angry. We seen what happened to massa just by a spring, imagine Perez' tire hitting alonso in the head.
That´s FIA´s fault, they are who were asking for softer tyres with more degradation. Pirelli only follow their instructions.
You´re missing the target I´m afraid, it´s all FIA decisions, if they ask Pirelli for tyres that don´t last more than 10 laps, Pirelli have to do so. It´s FIA who don´t want to limit the aerodynamics and need something to do the competition more exciting, so the only way to overcome the aerodynamical problems and seeing more overtaking is using rubbish tyres so we see huge differences in tyre perfomances that allow the drivers to overtake.... but it´s all fake and I don´t want fake overtakings, I want real competition, and that can´t be done with DRS or tyres that don´t last more than 2 laps when pushing hard
It´s all FIA, they don´t want to face the problem, and they´re using patches that don´t solve anything....