
What do you think? Are there any advantages to a single (control?) tyre that I haven't considered?
Or the team with the best relationship with the tyre manufacturer gets to do most of the testing, and the tyres suit their bike best.Rusty wrote:The only difference is that we'll see a return to the bad old days where some riders complain that some others get special treatment re: special compounds.
Instead of complaining that the Michelins don't work, some will be complaining that someone else got a better tyre due to favouritism.
i actually agree with you there.. but thats not what the class is about. i would rather see the tyre companies go at it, in fact, maybe there should be more tyre companies brought in. i think i counted 6 michelin runners that finished the Motegi race, the rest on bridgies. maybe they could have a rule where you can only supply tyres for "x" number of riders? if they limited that to 6, it would mean at least 3 manufacturers and they all get the same amount of riders giving data? surely that would help level the playing field as well. could also make it that a tyre company can supply no more than 2 official factory teams so no one really has the jump.SoundGuy wrote:
It's better for racing and it levels out the playing field.
I agree that it levels out the playing field, but how is it better for racing?SoundGuy wrote:It's better for racing and it levels out the playing field.
Again, is the racing really better or is it a 'better spectacle'? I don't follow F1 so I couldn't comment there. I agree that a control tyre works well for WSBK, but it's a production class and the control tyre simply serves to highlight the differences between bikes (the whole purpose of running a production class).Grey Ghost wrote:I'm keen on competition between tyre manufacturers too, however I think control tyres have always made F1 & WSBK racing better. Hopefully the same will happen in MotoGP
That's the sort of forward-thinking that I believe DORNA should employ - encourage healthy competition and all the competitors improve - enforce a monopoly and everybody suffers.sneakypete wrote:...maybe they could have a rule where you can only supply tyres for "x" number of riders? if they limited that to 6, it would mean at least 3 manufacturers and they all get the same amount of riders giving data? surely that would help level the playing field as well. could also make it that a tyre company can supply no more than 2 official factory teams so no one really has the jump....
Technically yes, but can you imagine the response from the Spanish holy trilogy (Pedrosa, Puig & Repsol), Rossi, and even the established Bridgestone runners if Michelin won the tender. A few weeks ago Puig was encouraging all the Michelin runners to boycott the Brno GP on "safety grounds", Repsol used it's considerable influence (money talks) to force HRC into swapping Dani to Bridgestone rubber mid-season, and I think the likes of Ducati would be justifiably pissed off about being forced off rubber they've worked for four years to develop.penno wrote:...Well the tender is open to all manuafacturers so you never know, you may get your wish...
Providing of course that no one gets "special" tyres. Seems to work OK in WSBK so you have to assume will work the same in MotoGP.SoundGuy wrote:Again, i disagree.
- Its stops the teams and riders making tyre excuses, everyone is on the same rubber.
Therefore it comes down to who's the best rider on the best motorcycle package.
Pirelli were only a small player prior to the intro of the one tyre rule in WSBK. Perhaps the rule will make Dunlops dream of another World Championship come true.dave#3 wrote:Technically yes, but can you imagine the response from the Spanish holy trilogy (Pedrosa, Puig & Repsol), Rossi, and even the established Bridgestone runners if Michelin won the tender. A few weeks ago Puig was encouraging all the Michelin runners to boycott the Brno GP on "safety grounds", Repsol used it's considerable influence (money talks) to force HRC into swapping Dani to Bridgestone rubber mid-season, and I think the likes of Ducati would be justifiably pissed off about being forced off rubber they've worked for four years to develop.