Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Tin-top thrills among the Mondello Park Historic Festival highlights

National
Tin-top thrills among the Mondello Park Historic Festival highlights

How Sutton shone while Ingram’s luck deserted him at Brands Hatch

Feature
BTCC
Brands Hatch (Indy Circuit)
How Sutton shone while Ingram’s luck deserted him at Brands Hatch

Behind the debate over F1's future engines is a battle for control

Formula 1
Behind the debate over F1's future engines is a battle for control

The British GT star who is running ultramarathons to rounds for charity

British GT
The British GT star who is running ultramarathons to rounds for charity

Edmundson stars in Minis as the BTCC supports entertain at Brands Hatch

National
Edmundson stars in Minis as the BTCC supports entertain at Brands Hatch

How a rules rumbling and full-course caution call added edge to the IndyCar title fight

Feature
IndyCar
Indianapolis Road Course
How a rules rumbling and full-course caution call added edge to the IndyCar title fight

Red Bull aims to hit F1 weight limit by Austrian GP

Formula 1
Miami GP
Red Bull aims to hit F1 weight limit by Austrian GP

Five things we learned at the MotoGP French Grand Prix

Feature
MotoGP
French GP
Five things we learned at the MotoGP French Grand Prix

Pirelli welcomes F1 downforce cuts for 2021 to help tyre company

Pirelli boss Mario Isola says the FIA's plan to further trim Formula 1's downforce levels in 2021 to help the tyre company is more a matter of performance than safety

Pirelli is obliged to provide the same tyres that were used in 2019 for the 2020 and 2021 seasons.

With downforce and thus load levels on the tyres expected to increase, it was agreed during the lockdown earlier this year to rein in downforce with revised floor regulations for next season.

However after the problems in Silverstone the FIA has promised a further downforce cut for 2021, with tweaks in a few areas.

The details will be discussed by team technical directors in an FIA technical working group meeting on Friday.

Isola has welcomed the promised changes, but explains that reining in downforce should not be regarded as a safety measure, as Pirelli can always increase pressures to compensate for high loads.

The problem is that higher pressures create other issues that impact the racing, as was seen at Silverstone.

"The FIA decided to do that," said Isola of the change. "And I cannot say that I'm not in agreement. But I don't want that the message to be that it's for safety reasons, because we can use the pressure to compensate for the level of load.

"Obviously, if we consider that from now to the end of 2021 the ability of the teams to develop the cars is huge.

"We can end up at the end of 2021 with a level of load that is really very high.

"And therefore we are obliged to increase the pressure to where we have again degradation, overheating or blistering at the level that we don't want, so it's the right move to do for next year."

Isola said that the higher pressures mandated for the 70th Anniversary GP at Silverstone helped to ensure that there was no repeat of the failures seen at the British GP a week earlier.

"For me it's not a matter of safety. If we increase the pressure we can compensate for the level of load, the level of stress that you put on the tyres.

"We did it for Silverstone for the second race.

"Okay, it's difficult to compare, because in the second race we didn't have a stint of 37-38 laps.

"But according to the analysis we made on tyres after the second Silverstone, everything was working well. So the pressure obviously is playing an important part in this equation.

"And with the pressure we can support the construction.

"You have vertical and lateral forces that are acting on tyres, and we can establish a minimum pressure that is different for each circuit and is calculated according to the level of energy that is going into the tyres."

Pirelli is still hoping that it can modify the current construction for 2021, and is planning to conduct prototype testing in FP2 sessions later in the season.

Previous article Vandoorne "ready to do a good job" as F1 reserve driver
Next article Ferrari wants "clarity and transparency" on F1 car copying rules through appeal

Top Comments