ferkan wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 23:28What is spectacular about these tires? Im completely serious, what is it about them? We pretty much have 1 stop races all the time. Today, Spain, one of the toughest races on tire - 1stop for 90% of the field. 5 years ago? 3-4 stopper.GrandAxe wrote: ↑13 May 2018, 22:56Taking 0.4mm off without changing the build or chemistry is equivalent to wear from a couple of laps, only it will be on a brand new surface. Same tyre, just thinner surface rubber.
The excess 0.4mm was deemed unsafe due to excessive graining.
Blame for this mess should go to both Pirelli and the FIA for making the tyres part of what they call "the spectacle", or the "circus". The consequence is that tyres have now become a political tool to be batted around. Its best to take the tyres out and give us good old, uncontroversial racing.
Thing is, Ferrari struggled badly with tires. They where faster on S then SS, as where RB. This is something completely new. Only team not struggling with SS was team that struggled most with them up until this weekend. If 0.4mm change is nothing, then why introduce it at all? Even Ric said he had big issues with tires today. I dont buy it, there is no need for Pirelli to listen to suggestion of champ contending team if there is no serious security risk. And there really is no...we ran 39 laps on SS with 100kg fuel on board in Bahrain and Baku ffs.
So just for the sake of clear thinking, what please is the difference between a tyre (of this type) that has done enough laps to scrub 4 mm off as use and a tyre that is issued with 4mm ground off? (ignore if it was pushed,or nursed)
OK, we know that heat curing the tyre changes the surface properties of the 'rubber' and that when the tyre is new more thickness means more movement, but what is lost and gained from a cars point of view by it being issued thinner when compared to one that has done (say) 3 laps on a practice day?
Would it detract from some teams or just remove a problem from others? (obviously, one team getting a problem is a benefit to another)