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The Future of the F1 Tire Supply


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#51 404KF2

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 04:25

I don't think Michelin's into the cheese tire concept anyway, so the point's doubly moot.



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#52 Secretariat

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 13:21

https://asia.nikkei....-by-Japan-s-BBS

 

 

BBS Japan, a wheel maker under the umbrella of the Maedakosen group, has signed four- and three-year contracts with the governing bodies of F1 and NASCAR, respectively. BBS was likely selected for its track record or supplying F1 teams.

 

Depending on what is asked for in a future tire tender, it stands to reason standardizing the wheels makes it easier for another tire manufacturer to produce tires. On the other hand, may cement the idea that tire manufacturer variety will come in the form of different sole suppliers for different series as opposed to competition within series.  



#53 pdac

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 13:35

Multiple tyre suppliers would work if tyre supply was get equal to all teams and the tyre suppliers, so instead of teams only using tyres exclusively from 1 tyre supplier, teams rotate through the different tyre suppliers on a race to race basis.

 

Each tyre supplier homolgates 4 dry compounds & 2 wet compounds for the season and brings 2 dry & 2 wet compounds to each race.

 

2 tyre suppliers after Friday practice each teams choose 1 dry & 1 wet compound from each supplier to use for rest of weekend.

This creates 4 dry tyre combinations using Pirelli & Michelin for example - Pirelli soft/Michelin soft, Pirelli hard/Michelin soft, Pirelli soft/Michelin hard, Pirelli hard/Michelin hard and 2 wet tyre combinations Pirelli inter/Michelin wet, Pirelli wet/Michelin inter,

 

3 tyre suppliers or more then before the start of the season each team assigned 2 of the available tyres suppliers for each race.

Team 1 tyre supplier A & B, Team 2 tyre supplier A & C, team 3 tyre supplier B & C, etc

 

This way all tyre suppliers supply all teams with the same amount of tyres per season creating similar supply costs for each supplier, while still creating a tyre competion. If there is 3 or more competing tyre suppliers than teams will be using tyres from different suppliers at each race which lead to greater variation in each teams performnce race to race as the different tyre impact car performance.

 

One problem with that is that tyre performance is not just about the compound, the construction and the car its fitted to. The road surface also plays an important part. So it's quite likely that the tyres from one manufacturers would work well at one circuit, but not another. It would be very much about who lucked out and got the right manufacturer at each circuit and by rotating them, it's possible that one team could luck out and get the best tyre at every circuit.

 

So, I agree, it's very much just another gimmick.



#54 Secretariat

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 14:30

I don't think Michelin's into the cheese tire concept anyway, so the point's doubly moot.

Michelin is not the only other supplier. Nevertheless, in principal I don't disagree. However, what happens if the formula moves to longer life tires given some of the sustainability objectives of the FIA? Specifically regarding Michelin, I think it is pretty clear they can make long life tires with good performance.



#55 ray b

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 20:23

what about we have the current one make range of tyres HH to SS

 

but let the teams run what ever in any combination  SS r/f and a HH l/r if that is faster

instead of the no mix no match rules and limited tyre  selection  by some official by track

 

keep the one make range of tyres but free pick how they are used ?



#56 Sterzo

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 22:00

Why have varied tyre compounds? There's one wet, and one intermediate, why not one dry? That way we get racing between cars instead of racing between tyres.



#57 PayasYouRace

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 22:12

what about we have the current one make range of tyres HH to SS

 

but let the teams run what ever in any combination  SS r/f and a HH l/r if that is faster

instead of the no mix no match rules and limited tyre  selection  by some official by track

 

keep the one make range of tyres but free pick how they are used ?

 

So I get that SS would be Super Soft. So what's HH? Hardy Hard?



#58 shure

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 22:19

Why have varied tyre compounds? There's one wet, and one intermediate, why not one dry? That way we get racing between cars instead of racing between tyres.

would kinda defeat the object of the tires in the first place.  Their whole raison d'etre is to act as a means of controlling the race via pit stops.  If you only had eg one Soft compound all year, then that might last 15 laps at one circuit and 40 at another.  They select the compounds depending on the characteristics of the circuit



#59 ray b

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Posted 15 January 2022 - 22:21

So I get that SS would be Super Soft. So what's HH? Hardy Hard?

hardest hard or hyper hard

vs softest soft or super soft

 

we currently have 5 types of tyre with 3 labeled soft

why I do not know



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#60 pdac

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Posted 16 January 2022 - 01:02

Why have varied tyre compounds? There's one wet, and one intermediate, why not one dry? That way we get racing between cars instead of racing between tyres.

 

This



#61 PayasYouRace

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Posted 16 January 2022 - 09:13

hardest hard or hyper hard

vs softest soft or super soft

 

we currently have 5 types of tyre with 3 labeled soft

why I do not know

We currently have 5 compounds labelled 1 to 5. They’re labelled hard, medium and soft depending on the selection. I think you’re a few years out of date.



#62 Sterzo

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Posted 16 January 2022 - 17:06

would kinda defeat the object of the tires in the first place.  Their whole raison d'etre is to act as a means of controlling the race via pit stops.  If you only had eg one Soft compound all year, then that might last 15 laps at one circuit and 40 at another.  They select the compounds depending on the characteristics of the circuit

Going for a single compound of dry tyre would hardly defeat the object of tyres. You mean it would defeat the object of using cheese tyres to "spice up the show" instead of addressing the real problems. In fact we are, at last, seeing an attempt to address those problems with the 2022 cars. So it's exactly the right time to get rid of the joke tyres.


Edited by Sterzo, 16 January 2022 - 17:07.


#63 PayasYouRace

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Posted 16 January 2022 - 17:18

Going for a single compound of dry tyre would hardly defeat the object of tyres. You mean it would defeat the object of using cheese tyres to "spice up the show" instead of addressing the real problems. In fact we are, at last, seeing an attempt to address those problems with the 2022 cars. So it's exactly the right time to get rid of the joke tyres.

 

Even with other single suppliers at other times, compound options were always a good thing.

 

I can see why getting rid of the mandatory two compound rule would be a positive. But I think it’s important to keep some options.



#64 pdac

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Posted 16 January 2022 - 21:00

Even with other single suppliers at other times, compound options were always a good thing.

 

I can see why getting rid of the mandatory two compound rule would be a positive. But I think it’s important to keep some options.

 

Have a couple of options available, but make it that, after practice, the teams have to opt for a single compound to be used in quali and race.



#65 PayasYouRace

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Posted 17 January 2022 - 08:19

Have a couple of options available, but make it that, after practice, the teams have to opt for a single compound to be used in quali and race.

 

The 1997 system. Not sure when that was changed. Did it last until Brigestone single supply in 2007?



#66 Bleu

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Posted 17 January 2022 - 15:28

The 1997 system. Not sure when that was changed. Did it last until Brigestone single supply in 2007?

 

Yes. And the explanation Bridgestone gave (who called for the mandatory two-compound use) was that with that older rule, half of the rules brought to the race track were never used which was too much.

 

Of course, the talk of two compounds keep tyre manufacturer better in the spotlight which may be the unofficial reason for the change.



#67 Secretariat

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Posted 17 January 2022 - 15:44

Given that we are talking about the future and the conversation has also expanded to compounds (a good thing), what about the development of "super compounds"? Compounds that can be used in various dry conditions with a separate wet compound. To use Michelin again, they created hybrid slick intermediate tires some years ago for LMP's. I will raise again the factors related to sustainability and whether the future will involve the manufacture and use of less tires. A functional equivalent to "all season" radials for the dry and intermediate conditions.



#68 Secretariat

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Posted 19 January 2022 - 21:19

 


 


Speaking at a Pirelli pre-season launch in Monaco on Tuesday, the Italian tyre manufacturer’s head of F1 and car racing Mario Isola explained why he thinks the days of free choice may be over. “We had to find this solution for the pandemic to be quicker in reaction,” explained Isola about the current fixed supply stance. “But then the teams came back to us saying, actually the system is quite good. We want to keep it for the future. So it was not our decision at the end to continue with this fixed allocation.” Isola explained that the teams felt much more comfortable being told what tyres were being picked for them, than having to devote resources to working out the best option themselves.

 

 

 

Wanted to add this to the chain of discussion regarding tire choice. If the teams are happy to not put in effort regarding tire choice, perhaps being given 6 sets of 1 Super Compound TM  tire  (haha) in the future is something they also will be happy with. 

 

https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/why-pirellis-emergency-f1-fixed-supply-rule-looks-set-to-stay/7391305/


Edited by Secretariat, 19 January 2022 - 21:19.