I read somewhere ages ago that the tyres are taken by the tire company, not the teams. They are divided up into batches and then it's randomly drawn as to who gets which batch.manchild wrote:When and how are Bridgestones distributed to teams?... Is there some sort of randomization? Can FIA and teams inspect and compare if the compound they got is the same as the one their rivals got? Is anyone aware of exact procedure of tyre distribution?
As for Manchild's question, tyres of the same compound are all identical and distributed to the teams by Bridgestone. There are a number of safeguards built into the Sporting Regulations to ensure fairness. I have copied them below. Most importantly in answer to your query, as it indicates in point (b), allocation is conducted by the FIA technical delegate; and in point (c) the FIA can choose to replace tyres if it so wishes.
76) Control of tyres :
a) The outer sidewall of all tyres which are to be used at an Event must be marked with a unique
identification.
b) Other than in cases of force majeure (accepted as such by the stewards of the meeting), all tyres
intended for use at an Event must be presented to the FIA technical delegate for allocation prior to
the end of initial scrutineering.
c) At any time during an Event, and at his absolute discretion, the FIA technical delegate may select
alternative dry-weather tyres to be used by any team or driver from among the relevant stock of tyres
which such team's designated supplier has present at the Event.
d) A competitor wishing to replace one unused tyre by another identical unused one must present both
tyres to the FIA technical delegate.
e) The use of tyres without appropriate identification may result in deletion of the relevant driver’s
qualifying time or exclusion from the race.
f) The only permitted type of tyre heating devices are blankets which use resistive heating elements.
I hate to repeat myself, so please reread what I already posted here:allan wrote:So whether the tires game is fair or not is simply related to you people, i'd say it is fair, but manchild or pro wouldn't agree (i guess), and that's all part of the game, isn't it?
True. I don't think it's merely a case of them having been existing customers, more that they were in a position to instruct Bridgestone exactly what sort of tires would suit their new car, and also to design the car with this in mind - while all other teams were without this foresight. Any team would do the same in this situation so it's not a blight on Ferrari at all nor their sportsmanship..allan wrote:yes, they do have a slight advantage, but the tires are completely new according to bridgestone, ...:
actually i can still smell it from the billions of threads in the sitemiqi23 wrote:Wooo, you seem like a proper Ferrari fan mate. You need to chill out, we will see how the season goes. No one said anything about Ferrari cheating or anything, you just smelled it coming didnt you