collapse

* Welcome

Welcome to GPWizard F1 Forum!

GPWizard is the friendliest F1 forum you'll find anywhere. You have a host of new like-minded friends waiting to welcome you.

So what are you waiting for? Becoming a member is easy and free! Take a couple seconds out of your day and register now. We guarantee, you wont be sorry you did.

Click Here to become a full Member for Free

* User Info

 
 
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

* Newsletter

GPWizard F1 Forum Newsletter Email address:
Weekly
Fortnightly
Monthly

* Grid Game Deadlines

Qualifying

Race

* Shoutbox

Refresh History
  • Wizzo: :good:
    March 05, 2024, 11:44:46 PM
  • Dare: my chat button is onthe bottom rightWiz
    March 03, 2024, 11:58:24 PM
  • Wizzo: Yes you should see the chat room button at the bottom left of your screen
    March 02, 2024, 11:39:55 PM
  • Open Wheel: Is there a Chat room button or something to access “Race day conversation”
    March 02, 2024, 02:46:02 PM
  • Wizzo: The 2024 Grid Game is here!  :yahoo:
    January 30, 2024, 01:42:23 PM
  • Wizzo: Hey everybody - the shout box is back!  :D
    August 21, 2023, 12:18:19 PM

* Who's Online

  • Dot Guests: 259
  • Dot Hidden: 0
  • Dot Users: 1
  • Dot Users Online:

* Top Posters

cosworth151 cosworth151
16178 Posts
Scott Scott
14057 Posts
Dare Dare
13016 Posts
John S John S
11293 Posts
Ian Ian
9729 Posts

Author Topic: How Pirelli supplies tyres to each race meeting  (Read 3232 times)

Offline John S

  • F1 Legend
  • ****
  • Date Registered: Jan 2007
  • Location: Lincolnshire, UK
  • Posts: 11293
  • 11550 credits
  • View Inventory
  • Send Money To John S
  • Max for 3rd title! - to see more Toto apoplexy.
How Pirelli supplies tyres to each race meeting
« on: May 16, 2012, 12:30:49 PM »

A look at massive logistical task to get 1800 tyres on rims at GPs.           
This in depth article, courtesy of nextgen-auto.com, includes a countdown of work to be done in the week of a GP.
Jeez it takes two days just to put all the tyres on the rims at each race, :o who said F1 racing was glamourous - not if you are a tyre fitter.  ;)


In the first of a series of features, we look at how tyres are made and distributed to the Formula One teams.  Pirelli brings around 1800 tyres to each grand prix, but the destiny of these tyres is mapped out long before they arrive at the circuit. The tyres for each race are made in a specific production run before the grand prix.

They are manufactured at Pirelli's state of the art motorsport facility in Izmit, just outside the Turkish capital of Istanbul. During the production process, each tyre is allocated a barcode provided by the FIA (the sport's governing body). This barcode is the tyre's 'passport', which is embedded firmly into the structure during the vulcanisation process and cannot be swapped. The code contains all the details of each tyre, making it traceable throughout the race weekend with Pirelli's RTS (Racing Tyre System) software, which can read and update all the data.

For European grands prix, the tyres are then transported to Pirelli's logistics and distribution hub at Didcot in the United Kingdom. Once they arrive there, an FIA official receives a list of bar codes, which relate to the tyres that will be taken to the next grand prix. The FIA (the sport's governing body) then allocates barcodes and therefore tyres to each individual teams at random. Pirelli itself is not involved in this process at all, meaning that the Italian firm cannot influence which tyres are allocated to which team, although a rigorous quality control process in Izmit ensures that all the tyres leaving the factory are identical.

Once at the circuit, the tyres are then allocated to the teams in strict compliance with the list that has been previously prepared by the FIA. The bar codes allow both the FIA and Pirelli to ensure that the right teams, according to the regulations, are using the correct tyres.

Each team is allocated a Pirelli engineer, who works exclusively with that team for all of the year, but the database that every engineer works off allows the engineer to see only information relating specifically to his or her team over the weekend, so that individual strategies are not compromised. Development data is overseen by Pirelli's senior engineers, who monitor all the information in order to assist the research team in charge of shaping the next generation of tyres.

Pirelli motorsport director Paul Hembery points out: "Even if we wanted to, which we certainly don't, there is no way that we could influence which tyres are being allocated to which teams, as this is a job taken care of entirely by the FIA once the tyres have left the Izmit factory. It is just another way that impartiality can be ensured among all the teams, which is a huge priority for us as exclusive tyre supplier. The way that our team engineers work also respects this confidentiality, which is always of paramount importance."

COUNTDOWN TO A GRAND PRIX

Before the grand prix:

 Pirelli, with the approval from the FIA, selects the tyres for the race a softer compound plus a harder compound.

 Production of the tyre allocation begins at the Izmit factory in Turkey. We supply approximately 1800 Formula One tyres for each race; about 700 more if the race is a GP2 round as well as 600 for GP3.

Two weeks before the grand prix:

 For European events the tyres for the race are transported by road from Izmit to Didcot: a journey of approximately 3100 kilometres that takes three days.

 The tyres arrive at the Didcot facility and have their bar codes scanned into Pirelli's system. The FIA (the governing body of world motorsport) is then notified of the bar codes.

 At random, the FIA allocates certain barcodes to each team. The allocated tyres are then sorted out by team in Didcot and loaded into seven trucks for transportation to the grand prix (four trucks for F1, three trucks for GP2 and GP3).

One week before the grand prix:

 The trucks set off from Didcot for the race, normally arriving on the Monday before the race takes place. The 18 fitters set up the fitting area and the barcodes are confirmed again with the FIA.

Five days before the grand prix:

 The fitters start fitting tyres onto the rims. It takes an experienced fitter 2.5 minutes to fit one tyre from start to finish: for all the tyres of the weekend they need two days. The teams own the wheels: they are brought to Pirelli at the circuit for the tyres to be fitted onto them.

During the grand prix weekend:

 The sporting regulations determine that one set of the harder dry tyre must be returned after the first practice session, with one set of the softer and one set of the harder compound to be returned before the start of the third practice session. A further set of softer and one of the harder compound must be returned before the start of qualifying. This means that each driver has six sets of the dry compounds (three of each specification) available for qualifying and the race.

 Tyres that are returned get taken off their rims, as they won't be used anymore, with the rims being returned to the teams.

After the grand prix:

 All remaining tyres, both used and unused, are taken off their rims and then transported back to Didcot. When they arrive, the tyres are taken to a specialised plant where they are shredded and then burned at very high temperature in order to produce fuel for cement factories. The material produced in this process can also be used for road surfaces and other industrial applications.

By Olivier Ferret, Nextgen-auto.com, Today.

 


Racing is Life - everything else is just....waiting. (Steve McQueen)

Offline cosworth151

Re: How Pirelli supplies tyres to each race meeting
« Reply #1 on: May 16, 2012, 01:22:27 PM »
Good find, John. It's very informative. Thanks!  :good:

The last paragraph really surprises me. Old NASCAR tires are sold to collectors. A good friend of mine made a coffee table out of one of Dale Jarrett's race tires. It's not like Bernie to miss out on a revenue stream.  ;)
“You can search the world over for the finer things, but you won't find a match for the American road and the creatures that live on it.”
― Bob Dylan

Online Jericoke

Re: How Pirelli supplies tyres to each race meeting
« Reply #2 on: May 16, 2012, 03:09:19 PM »
Good find, John. It's very informative. Thanks!  :good:

The last paragraph really surprises me. Old NASCAR tires are sold to collectors. A good friend of mine made a coffee table out of one of Dale Jarrett's race tires. It's not like Bernie to miss out on a revenue stream.  ;)

I very much doubt the cement factories take them for free... unless they're owned by Mr. Eccelstone.

I can appreciate that Pirelli wants to keep the tires secret.  I presume they are more sophisticated than the rubber NASCAR uses.  (Maybe I'm wrong, it's not like I can compare them!)

Offline F1fanaticBD

Re: How Pirelli supplies tyres to each race meeting
« Reply #3 on: May 16, 2012, 04:40:40 PM »
What are the chances that these tyres are being used to resurface and improve the Paul Ricard for free?? :DntKnw: :DntKnw:
Keep running the fast cars, you will be never out of girls

Offline Andy B

Re: How Pirelli supplies tyres to each race meeting
« Reply #4 on: May 17, 2012, 09:51:03 AM »
I have a Goodyear F1 rear slick said to be used by Gerhard Burger on a Beneton 195 at an Esteril test, I believe its a left rear.
It has a serial number but I cannot find a web site to verify the details.
I has a glass centre and is used as a coffee table.
Once you have retired every day is a Saturday!

 


SimplePortal 2.3.6 © 2008-2014, SimplePortal
Menu Editor Pro 1.0 | Copyright 2013, Matthew Kerle