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Thread: Pirelli defend tyres after Schumacher blast

  1. #121
    Moderator jens's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Garry Walker View Post
    What KERS fiasco?
    In 2009 it proved to be less efficient than initially thought. All four teams, who had opted to develop and install KERS for 2009 (McLaren, Ferrari, BMW, Renault) were struggling in midfield in the beginning of the season. Needless to say, those teams happened to lock out the whole Top4 in WCC in previous year! McLaren and Ferrari improved later in the season, BMW improved only after they had ditched KERS. So although much of McLaren's troubles were put down on aerodynamics, it was easy to conclude that opting for KERS significantly hindered the progress of factory teams that year.

  2. #122
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    Quote Originally Posted by henners88 View Post
    Schuey just needs to try a bit harder and live up to his reputation as being able to adapt to any car. He had a legendary status after he retired that was repeated alot here regarding his adaptation abilities. Four 'idoitic' (hilarious term) tyres should be easy to overcome surely?
    The Schue is on the other foot now though. When the German Baron first burst onto the scenes he was amazing and unpredictable. People called him dangerous but those people preferred the Prost type of racing to the creativity of Senna.

    Then he became bloated on preferential machinery and 'creative' governance from the FIA. An aura was built around him that he may have deserved in his former years but flattered him in his latter life before FR (first retirement).

    Now we see a driver who cannot hold a candle to a young gun who, lets be fair, is not top flight. Nico is a good peddler but no Hammy or Alonso.

    In the ole days, ioan would have waxed lyrical about how Schumacher could have taken a Minardi and won races with it. Pfffff!!! Yet again, a hard taste of reality for Mr Armchair Expert. We are seeing the end of a great but terrible Champion who is wasting a seat in F1 the same as Massa is.

    Last orders at the Ferrari Old Guard me thinks.

  3. #123
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    Quote Originally Posted by ArrowsFA1 View Post
    Indeed I think it is probably safe to exclude Caterham, Marussia & HRT from the list of possible winners but other than that who knows
    Haha

    I think that is a safe bet! Although it would make my day if one of those teams finished a race tenth and scored one driver point, just so they can boast to the other two teams about the one point they scored
    Ha'wey Hamilton, bring the WDC crown home and the beers are on me

  4. #124
      wedge's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by henners88 View Post
    Now the engines are more reliable and lucky wins are now decided through the use of tyres rather than a Jordan or a Stewart inheriting the lead due to a McLaren or Ferrari blowing its top or crashing into each other. Nobody used to moan about that.
    Because its one of the cliches of motorsport: to finish first, first you must finish.

    Quote Originally Posted by henners88 View Post
    Schuey just needs to try a bit harder and live up to his reputation as being able to adapt to any car. He had a legendary status after he retired that was repeated alot here regarding his adaptation abilities. Four 'idoitic' (hilarious term) tyres should be easy to overcome surely?
    He's past his best. Not the first nor the last to be humbled. Some people thought Barrichello's time came too soon yet he was beaten by a pay driver.

    Quote Originally Posted by jens View Post
    In 2009 it proved to be less efficient than initially thought. All four teams, who had opted to develop and install KERS for 2009 (McLaren, Ferrari, BMW, Renault) were struggling in midfield in the beginning of the season. Needless to say, those teams happened to lock out the whole Top4 in WCC in previous year! McLaren and Ferrari improved later in the season, BMW improved only after they had ditched KERS. So although much of McLaren's troubles were put down on aerodynamics, it was easy to conclude that opting for KERS significantly hindered the progress of factory teams that year.
    Depend' on one's view. Some teams thought it was a hindrance to car development whereas McLaren and Ferrari made an effort to optimise KERS with the former and with the latter optimising the package via reducing weight.
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  5. #125
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    Quote Originally Posted by wedge View Post
    Williams [...] have never made top cars. Suddenly gaining a second overnight going into the Spanish GP at Catalunya - the greatest test on a car's aero. I find it too good to be true.
    Seriously? I must have imagined all those championships and race wins.

    As others have said, Williams have shown genuine pace this season, the win in Spain was earned on merit.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Knock-on View Post
    In the ole days, ioan would have waxed lyrical about how Schumacher could have taken a Minardi and won races with it. Pfffff!!!
    Nowadays he'd moan that Minardi only won because of a tyre lottery!
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    Quote Originally Posted by tfp View Post
    Haha

    I think that is a safe bet! Although it would make my day if one of those teams finished a race tenth and scored one driver point, just so they can boast to the other two teams about the one point they scored
    Even if they don't score a point, the race for 10th place in the constructors could be won in Monaco, given the likelihood of a high number of retirements. If Caterham or HRT can beat Glock's 14th place from Australia they'll take the 10th place in the WCC, and it could easily stand to the end of the season. There is serious money at stake there, more than just boasting rights that's for sure so it's an important weekend for the bottom 3 teams.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Dave B View Post
    Seriously? I must have imagined all those championships and race wins.
    When was the last time have they won a championship? Eight years winless streak with. Yep, Williams are winners....

    Sam Michaels saw Williams last win and the cars went downhill under his reign as Technical Director.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dave B View Post
    As others have said, Williams have shown genuine pace this season, the win in Spain was earned on merit.
    Define genuine pace. Alonso - arguably F1's most complete driver can't get his head round on that concept. He doesn't know if Ferrari made genuine gains or tyre lottery.
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    But still you say that you enjoyed the races, wedge, and this is the important thing. You said that sport is boring, but this year proves that it must not be so. Maybe it is not "pure', but I don't believe in "pureness" and even if I believed "fun and exciting" is better than "pure and boring" IMO.
    Formula 1

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    I doubt I'm saying anything new here but to me the main reason for not having a problem with the tyres is the fact that all teams have to deal with them. So from the competition side of things no harm done.
    The race are unpredictable but overall it looks like business as usual to me. It's Bieber and Alonso on top of the standings not Maldonado and Perez. And Schumi is the same average driver he always was .

  11. #131
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    Did it ever occur to anyone that the deletion of the blown diffusers has a major impact on how the teams cope with the tires? I think that pre-season testing allowed the teams to know where the threshold for the tires was at, but placing them on the car that is inherently more tail-happy tends to be an issue. Not really a big deal in my eyes. I'm happy with F1 at the present moment:

    1) Six world champions on the grid.
    2) Enthralling racing.
    3) Good mix of winners.
    4) The stewards aren't getting in the way.

    Chill out homies!


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  12. #132
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    Quote Originally Posted by F1boat View Post
    But still you say that you enjoyed the races, wedge, and this is the important thing. You said that sport is boring, but this year proves that it must not be so. Maybe it is not "pure', but I don't believe in "pureness" and even if I believed "fun and exciting" is better than "pure and boring" IMO.
    Purity of Formula One is best drivers and teams building the best cars possible and hopefully legal.

    Quality in the sport derives from a small pool of elite teams and/or individuals and hence it can become boring:

    Take such artificial restraints away and an inevitable process of concentration begins. Football is the game of the city. The big city giants can afford to pay more, so they attract the best players and a reduced number of clubs cut away from the pack. Make the area of operation worldwide and the number is reduced still further. There is space for a handful of giants to go global, first winning over fans in Asia and North America, and then working to find ways to turn this allegiance into money.

    The super-size teams are thus able to assemble squads of dazzling quality, making it hard for the mid-size clubs to compete. The price of quality is a large dose of predictability, the big dilemma of today's top domestic leagues.

    BBC - Tim Vickery: A top league with both quality and unpredictability
    Unpredictability creates excitement but not necessarily sign of quality - the inconsistent performances, questioning Williams' genuine pace being a case in point.

    Yes, I did find the races exciting - to an extent. It's like being greedy with rich food and Spain was far too good to be true - Barcelona being the ultimate test of a car's aerodynamics has tended to create snooze-fests.

    Last year struck the right balance.

    I'd love an underdog to win. It generally came from a special talent 'outdriving' a car - perhaps the ultimate sign of quality.

    Quote Originally Posted by gloomyDAY View Post
    Did it ever occur to anyone that the deletion of the blown diffusers has a major impact on how the teams cope with the tires?
    Pirelli overcompensated via new tyre construction and softer rears.
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    Quote Originally Posted by wedge View Post
    Pirelli overcompensated via new tyre construction and softer rears.
    So? Pirelli did as they were asked to do by the FIA. Time for the teams to buck up and deal with it!

    I feel like we're going around in circles here people. I'm bowing out of this thread. Peace.
    Marco Simoncelli 1987-2011

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    If purity is dull, screw purity Although the best are still leading and one of them will win in the end. It will just be a little harder this time.
    Formula 1

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    Proof that teams are utterly and completely retarded
    Pirelli in new push for qualifying tyres to solve Q3 issues - F1 news - AUTOSPORT.com

    And it was unanimous when we last spoke to them that they felt the tactical intrigue created by not running and having fresh tyres was something that was good for the sport. Where the real solution in that lies I don't know
    Really, how have these people gotten to such high level positions when they are such utter and complete idiots? Just amazing.

  16. #136
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    Quote Originally Posted by Garry Walker View Post
    Proof that teams are utterly and completely retarded
    Pirelli in new push for qualifying tyres to solve Q3 issues - F1 news - AUTOSPORT.com



    Really, how have these people gotten to such high level positions when they are such utter and complete idiots? Just amazing.

    Nice to see that for once...you're in great mood
    When you're tired of rallying...you're tired of life

  17. #137
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    Quote Originally Posted by F1boat View Post
    If purity is dull, screw purity
    That's what NASCAR and Touring Cars are there for.

    Quote Originally Posted by gloomyDAY View Post
    So? Pirelli did as they were asked to do by the FIA. Time for the teams to buck up and deal with it!

    I feel like we're going around in circles here people. I'm bowing out of this thread. Peace.
    Pirelli were asked to make aggressive compounds which they did as last year testifies but were Pirelli told to alter to the tyres for this year?

    Interesting article in this week's Autosport. Mark Hughes argues whether its "plain dumb luck".
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    For the best part of 10 years I've been reading threads on here about how dull the sport is/was when Schumacher or Vettel dominated, and now finally there's a genuine chance for midfield teams to do well and people are complaining.

    Tyre management is difficult. Here's the dirty secret: F1 is meant to be difficult. Those who get it right reap the rewards. It's not a lottery, it's hard work, talented designers and skilful driving.
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    Quote Originally Posted by gloomyDAY View Post
    Did it ever occur to anyone that the deletion of the blown diffusers has a major impact on how the teams cope with the tires?
    I think that's a good point.

    This is the first year for a while that there has been no clever/loophole-exploiting device that has given a big advantage to the teams that have been able to make the most of it. Mercedes have their double-DRS but its advantage seems to be minor and only in qualifying. Other than that, it's a pretty level playing field in terms of aero and chassis. I think that's a major reason why the field is so closely matched this year, and getting your car to work well at a particular track can move you up a lot of places.
    Mr Alca-Tazizzle likes this.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Dave B View Post
    For the best part of 10 years I've been reading threads on here about how dull the sport is/was when Schumacher or Vettel dominated, and now finally there's a genuine chance for midfield teams to do well and people are complaining.

    Tyre management is difficult.Here's the dirty secret: F1 is meant to be difficult. Those who get it right reap the rewards. It's not a lottery, it's hard work, talented designers and skilful driving.
    If F1 is meant to be difficult then F1 shouldn't be a charity to midfield teams. Such levels of parity is the preserve of NASCAR and Touring Cars.

    Is the current parity genuine? Too hard to say.
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