Well, how can we work around this one?
Could an F1 team store their tires in a high temperature room before a pit stop to get around the "tire warmer ban"?
Or maybe use solar heat with mirrors to heat the tires outside on a sunny day?
Sir G
I wouldn't.Ian P. wrote:Renault is probably on the right track with the exhaust ducted onto the tyre to heat it up. Others are bound to follow.
What i think is happening is that Bridgestone are revising the compounds at the end of the year, from where im standing they could revise the compounds to be like this;Ian P. wrote:Since the teams have not been making a big stink over this, there must be something in the pipeline to reduce the cold tyre effects. Just can't imagine what it is.
Also the possibility of getting oil(s) and crap on the tyres wont be good for rubber life or grip.Jersey Tom wrote:I wouldn't.Ian P. wrote:Renault is probably on the right track with the exhaust ducted onto the tyre to heat it up. Others are bound to follow.
Blast hot air on rears but not front? Big potential to really screw your balance and wear rates, particularly changing as the run goes on.
Or just overcooking the tires in general.
I still would not be pumping exhaust to the rear tires.Giblet wrote:That would be true in cars that were evenly balanced, but the new regs have skewed the results to more front downforce, and most teams with regular diffusers have been claiming it's difficult getting temperature to the rears. In the case of 2009 regs the balance is pre-skewed by the regulations.
Tire warmers are a waste of energy!... think green!Giblet wrote:I don't understand the hate for tire warmers. They are not that expensive (relatively) as all the teams already have them and they just keep drivers from having to drive on cold tires, which as Imola '94 proved can be dangerous.
The tires no matter how hard will always be designed to work in their best temp range, and no racing tire works well cold.