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New Pirelli tyres and DRS - a disaster for F1 and racing


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#4001 prty

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:14

That's an abhorrent statement. Hembery is basically saying that it doesn't matter who builds the best, fastest, most reliable car. Because Pirelli will make sure that they don't win.


Your definition is incomplete. "Best, fastest, most reliable car"... "for the given rules". This year rules use Pirelli 2013 tyres, which are the same for everyone. It's like Vettel saying "We are not going to the pace of the car, we are going to the pace of the tyre.". So what happened with the other teams doing better, have they a different tyre?
So fun when things are not going their way :yawnface:

By the way, these are the pit stop numbers for 2011. They were not so whiny then, with the same amount of stops. I wonder why.

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Edited by prty, 13 May 2013 - 11:18.


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#4002 discover23

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:17

That's an abhorrent statement. Hembery is basically saying that it doesn't matter who builds the best, fastest, most reliable car. Because Pirelli will make sure that they don't win.

Blame Bernie. Its been said already a few hundred thousand times that the fia does not want to keep the regulations static to prevent one team dominating the calendar year. They want to level set the playing field and have engineers from every team scratching their heads from the beginning of the season..

#4003 Sakae

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:19

Mateschitz...

#4004 baddog

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:20

Your definition is incomplete. "Best, fastest, most reliable car"... "for the given rules". This year rules use Pirelli 2013 tyres, which are the same for everyone. It's like Vettel saying "We are not going to the pace of the car, we are going to the pace of the tyre.". So what happened with the other teams doing better, have they a different tyre?
So fun when things are not going their way :yawnface:

Who is leading the championship right now then?


#4005 Sakae

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:21

Blame Bernie. Its been said already a few hundred thousand times that the fia does not want to keep the regulations static to prevent one team dominating the calendar year. They want to level set the playing field and have engineers from every team scratching their heads from the beginning of the season..


Yeah, this yo-yo engineering will "keep" cost down.

#4006 prty

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:21

Who is leading the championship right now then?


What is the current trend? If it remains as in Spain, will they continue to lead after a few GPs? Did their rivals have more problems than usual in the first races?
;)

Edited by prty, 13 May 2013 - 11:22.


#4007 Ferrari2183

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:25

That's an abhorrent statement. Hembery is basically saying that it doesn't matter who builds the best, fastest, most reliable car. Because Pirelli will make sure that they don't win.

So you're ok with Pirelli changing the tyres to suit a specific teams aerodynamic ability while at the same time punishing another's mechanical ability?

That doesn't sit well with me. Read the Domenicali article on Autosport about Ferrari working hard on one lap pace but not to the detriment of the cars ability on the tyres. This is what all teams should be doing. It's as simple as that for me.

#4008 ensign14

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:27

Yeah, this yo-yo engineering will "keep" cost down.

Put a spending cap on and I don't see the problem. :)

#4009 swerved

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:30

Mateschitz...



Yeah, he wasn't anywhere near as vociferous following Malaysia, or Bahrain.


#4010 Diablobb81

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:30

That's an abhorrent statement. Hembery is basically saying that it doesn't matter who builds the best, fastest, most reliable car. Because Pirelli will make sure that they don't win.


That's in the same vein of pure PR crap from PH:

"You want boring races?"

GTFO because it's not black and white. All most are asking is a good balance that eliminates the negatives form now and those from the Bridgestone era.

#4011 bmardini

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:32

Mateschitz...


oh boo hoo. RB makes too much DF. RB can't handle the tires. Pirelli wah wah wah. They're the same tires for everyone. You know before we were hearing about how briliant vettel was for visiting the pirelli factory and getting n edge in the tires over everyone. Then we hear about how he is dominating webber because he knows how to get the best out of the car and tires. Now that RB isn't looking as formidable anymore, suddenly Horner, DM, and SV are all spitting the dummy. Spare me - they're still favorites for the championship. I'm pretty sure that anyone in the paddock would trade RB's problem (mega fast car, some tire deg problems) with the opposite (normal car, good deg).

#4012 Clatter

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:36

oh boo hoo. RB makes too much DF. RB can't handle the tires. Pirelli wah wah wah. They're the same tires for everyone. You know before we were hearing about how briliant vettel was for visiting the pirelli factory and getting n edge in the tires over everyone. Then we hear about how he is dominating webber because he knows how to get the best out of the car and tires. Now that RB isn't looking as formidable anymore, suddenly Horner, DM, and SV are all spitting the dummy. Spare me - they're still favorites for the championship. I'm pretty sure that anyone in the paddock would trade RB's problem (mega fast car, some tire deg problems) with the opposite (normal car, good deg).


I'd forgotten about that. :lol:

#4013 boldhakka

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:38

By the way, these are the pit stop numbers for 2011. They were not so whiny then, with the same amount of stops. I wonder why.


Because it's not about the number of stops at all. Though Pirelli would like to frame it that way. There are many ways to build tyres that require the same number of stops at a specific track and given ambient conditions.

#4014 boldhakka

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:44

Seems that Hembery said it clear:

Andrew Benson ‏@andrewbensonf1
Hembery: "Unless u all want us to give Red Bull tyres to win championship. (One-stop processional races), one team would benefit. Them”


Umm. He doesn't seem to realize that things can be judged on principle, without having to look at outcomes. Why is a component supplier discussing outcomes. What in the world is going on here.

Is the fact that Red Bull would benefit the right reason to not change the tyres? There may be legit reasons to not make changes to the tyres, but this isn't one of them. Thats a kindergarten level argument from PH and designed to sway emotions, not a well-thought-out and rational explanation for avoiding an action.

#4015 baddog

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:45

Yeah exactly noone is complaining about the number of stops. complete strawman there. 4 stops driving like a looney or 2-3 driving more controlled would be a REAL mix that we would get something from.

#4016 prty

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:46

Umm. He doesn't seem to realize that things can be judged on principle, without having to look at outcomes.


Exactly. Not changing the rules of the game once it has started has to be the most important one.

#4017 Massa_f1

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:49

Sport should not be about entertainment in my book. It should be about who is the best in the business they are in. When you mess around to stop the best being the best or to mess orders around just for TV it's no longer a sport.
F1 is more like a controlled TV show these days. All because fans complained about pole to flag wins.

I don't see Man U being forced to field crap players in order to make the show better.

I have read Brundle's comments on the matter today, and for once even people who work in the F1 media are speaking out. Normally they are to afraid to do so.



#4018 Slackbladder

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 11:58

That statement from Hembury is utterly disgusting. It's not up to the tyre guy to be making statements about the teams.

#4019 boldhakka

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:02

Exactly. Not changing the rules of the game once it has started has to be the most important one.


Indeed. That would be a very legitimate argument. Unfortunately they've already changed the hard tyres once, and evidently are planning on changing the tyres to prevent the visually spectacular delaminations, so that reason is going to ring a little hollow at this point. But yes, broadly that's the kind of argument he should be making.

But he isn't, and that tells us something.

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#4020 Pothead4Philosopher

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:04

Sport should not be about entertainment in my book. It should be about who is the best in the business they are in. When you mess around to stop the best being the best or to mess orders around just for TV it's no longer a sport.
F1 is more like a controlled TV show these days. All because fans complained about pole to flag wins.

I don't see Man U being forced to field crap players in order to make the show better.

I have read Brundle's comments on the matter today, and for once even people who work in the F1 media are speaking out. Normally they are to afraid to do so.


Uh, every race this season has been won by WDC's. Top 4 in the WDC standings, as of now, are former (and current) WDC's. Looks to me that the best still are...uh... the best.

That, e.g., Lewis might not fight for the WDC all the way this year has nothing to do with his abilities, but with the inherent problems that has plagued Merc for years now.

#4021 Cavani

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:07

look at vettels quote here

"The first three cars were a little too fast for us and in looking after their tyres they did a better job today."


so the tyres aren't your deficit , your car was slower in that track in that particular day , you won two grand prix from five including a one two, you are leading both championships. bitch please

#4022 Slackbladder

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:08

Depends what you'd term "flat out", is it 100% of car's capacity? is that even possible? If not then isn't it more about as fast as possible with what's given to you? Think it was Kimi who said recently that even in the Bridgestone era you'd race up till 90% of the limits, rather than "flat out".


Even 90% is much more than today.

In addition the 'not pushing' in the past was often due to reliability issues. The cars nowadays are so reliable you rarely have to nurse the engine, or gearbox etc.

#4023 yoyogetfunky

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:16

I'd forgotten about that. :lol:


That was december 2011 right?

#4024 ExFlagMan

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:31

Even 90% is much more than today.

In addition the 'not pushing' in the past was often due to reliability issues. The cars nowadays are so reliable you rarely have to nurse the engine, or gearbox etc.

So they no longer tell them to turn the engine down/short shift etc to get to the end of the race/save engine for next week.

#4025 Ferrari2183

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:31

Sport should not be about entertainment in my book. It should be about who is the best in the business they are in. When you mess around to stop the best being the best or to mess orders around just for TV it's no longer a sport.
F1 is more like a controlled TV show these days. All because fans complained about pole to flag wins.

I don't see Man U being forced to field crap players in order to make the show better.

I have read Brundle's comments on the matter today, and for once even people who work in the F1 media are speaking out. Normally they are to afraid to do so.

Brundle would be better served addressing the problems facing the formula as whole instead of pointing fingers at Pirelli.

#4026 UPRC

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:35

Of course Red Bull is going to complain when the championship isn't a cake walk for them (which they're too used to at this point, Ferrari would whine much the same after their dominance began to wane), but what Mateschitz said is still true. It didn't look like a single driver pushed yesterday.

Brundle and Croft were also expressing quite a bit of discontent over what F1 has become during the race. I don't remember exactly what they had said other than Brundle pointing out at the end of the race that 80-something pit stops (!!!) is too many, but they certainly weren't being kind about what Pirelli's rubber has done.

When you even have television commentators saying on live TV that the sport is suffering, that's not good for the management. I hope they open their eyes and make Pirelli dial back their efforts to give viewers "a good show" and such. FIA, Pirelli, know what makes a good show? Drivers unable to push their cars out of fear of destroying their tyres? No, that's not it. How about drivers who CAN push to the limit and CAN race each other? Can we have that back, please?

Edited by UPRC, 13 May 2013 - 12:39.


#4027 Slackbladder

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:39

So they no longer tell them to turn the engine down/short shift etc to get to the end of the race/save engine for next week.


They do that as well of course. The point i'm making it that Kimi is right in saying they don't push all the time, now, or before, but it was much more under driver control in the past in that the fastest way to drive was to drive as fast as the machinery could allow (within limits), even if you couldn't do it all the time.

The only pain to driving at the total limit was risking busting the engine (or gearbox etc), but if it didn't then there was no downside to it. Now, there is always a downside to driving to fast, no matter what you do.


#4028 Slackbladder

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:40

Brundle would be better served addressing the problems facing the formula as whole instead of pointing fingers at Pirelli.


Well that's a another huge issue...

#4029 MightyMoose

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Posted 13 May 2013 - 12:40

We've reached our threshold for this topic, part 2 has been established and can be found here -->> http://forums.autosp...howtopic=185870