STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Formula One to change rules on in-season testing and tire changes
- Teams to run tire tests at Silverstone on July 17-19
- FIA president Jean Todt says driver safety must be the priority
- Six tire blow-outs at the British Grand Prix have inflated safety concerns
Designing Formula One tires |
The FIA has acted quickly
by deciding to amend two rules which ban race drivers testing and
prevent tires being changed during the season.
The drivers and teams had called for urgent action after a series of dramatic tire blow-outs compromised driver safety at the British Grand Prix Sunday.
Mercedes driver Lewis
Hamilton, who lost the race lead when his left-rear tire unravelled on
lap eight, the Ferraris of Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso, Toro
Rosso's Jean-Eric Vergne, McLaren's Sergio Perez and Sauber's Esteban
Gutierrez were all affected by tires failures.
In response to the
chaotic scenes at Silverstone, the FIA has proposed that race drivers
take part in a tire development test at the British circuit on July
17-19.
The test had originally
been set aside for the teams to trial their young drivers, who are now
set to miss out on a rare opportunity to drive an F1 car.
Pirelli tires: Ready to roll |
"Our priority is to
ensure safety for all in Formula One and we believe the incidents at
Silverstone represent a genuine safety concern for the drivers," said
FIA President Jean Todt.
"We have thus taken the
decision to alter the Young Driver Test in a bid to solve the problems
we saw at the British Grand Prix. I believe it is fitting to carry out
this work at the circuit upon which the issues were manifested."
The FIA's World Motorsport Council now has to give the green light to the rule changes, but that is expected to be a formality.
F1's sole tire supplier Pirelli is due to announce its response to the chaos at the British GP later on Tuesday.
The Italian manufacturer
said at Silverstone it had been looking forward to focusing on the
racing after being reprimanded at an FIA hearing for organizing a
three-day tire test with Mercedes in May -- but instead Pirelli has
found itself once again the center of unwanted attention.
Formula One season off to a racing start |
Mercedes -- who were
also reprimanded by the FIA for using race drivers Hamilton and Nico
Rosberg and a 2013 car at the controversial Barcelona tire test -- have
decided to sit out the Silverstone test for the sake of harmony within
the sport.
The German team's
"secret" test still riles their rivals -- especially as they have since
won races in Monaco and Britain -- but the shocking tire explosions at
the British GP have underlined the need for Pirelli to find a legitimate
solution to the tire failures.
Pirelli had wanted to introduce a new tire construction at the Canadian Grand Prix in June but failed to get all the teams to agree to the plan at a meeting in Monaco.
A spate of worryingly
delaminations -- where the tire layers separate -- earlier in the season
had led to concerns the tires were not safe.
When Pirelli took over
from Bridgestone as F1's official tire supplier in 2011, the rubber was
deliberately designed to be less durable so that teams would do more pit
stops and the racing would be more unpredictable.
But subsequent changes to the construction of the 2013 tire, based on the same principles, have now provoked not just unpredictability but chaos on the track.
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