lebesset wrote:just been following the BBC coverage of practise at Sochi
the subject of tyres came up [ what a surprise ] and one of the commentators [ tony dodgins ? ] said that after the Spa race we walked the track and on one of the corners the kerb was jagged , and that was the corner where the drivers were allowed to drive right off the circuit [ I remember watching that but don't remember which corner it was ]
not surprising then that there was a lot of tyre damage and even a couple of failures which of course the teams blamed on pirelli
i would have given pirelli a get-outta-jail-free-card if there wasn't a tyre disaster going on before (on multiple races tyres just blowing around your ears). instead, because that happened, i look at events like spa with rather a different eye.
and there have been many tracks with not-too pretty track features. matter of fact, i've seen a few F1 tracks in the past, and quite frankly, tracks have been a whole lot worse than the things you have seen on telly.
Somehow, people like to think that F1 tracks always have been perfectly smooth surfaces well-taken care of. Better believe that it's rather different.
These tire 'problems' in all of F1's history have only occurred with Pirelli and they blame it on the leadership and rules. BS. yeah, they're partially right. but the things happening with the tires in the pirelli era is absolutely unacceptable.
Remember the tire wars, and the US grand prix? they didn't take the risk/gamble because it was too high of a calculated risk. Pirelli did not do that. and that's the difference.
apart from that, doesn't this belong in the SPA thread?