Cynon wrote:CoopsII wrote:Salamander wrote:You know one complaint about Formula 1 that I absolutely have no time or patience That the drivers cannot handle rain - hence all the safety car starts and such. That is such complete and utter bullshite. The complaint should instead be about the fact that Pirelli cannot make a wet tyre worth a damn.
I agree and wonder if drivers in the future will require the bullsh1t you mentioned as, having little experience of racing in the wet, letting them loose in it would be futile.
Racing in the rain seems to becoming a lost art in just about every category, not just in F1...

There has certainly been an increased tendency to deploy safety cars or red flag a session in other series apart from F1 - just look at the World Endurance Championship, for example, where there seems to have been an increase in the use of safety cars in wet weather.
Part of it is perhaps that, in the wake of Simonsen's fatal accident in mixed conditions, that the organisers are much more inclined to err on the side of caution in wet conditions - there also seems to be signs that Michelin's wet weather tyres, in 2013 at least, seem to have not met the expectations of the teams (Michelin have reportedly had to completely redesign their wet weather tyres for 2014, whilst their "slick intermediate" tyres seem to be relatively unpopular despite heavy promotion from Michelin).
andrew2209 wrote:In some series, rain races could be a bit of a cop-out if they have to bring out safety cars every other lap for someone spinning off.
I know Bridgestone were praised IIRC for having a good wet-weather tyre, although the original monsoon-tyres were abadoned, because if it got so wet to use them, it would be unsafe for the medical helicopter to fly. Pirelli wet weather tyres just don't seem as good though. (Not that in recent seasons we've seen much need for them)
Bridgestone were generally complimented for the performance of their intermediate tyres given that they had a very wide operating range, to the point where for a time it almost rendered the full wet tyre obsolete.
Whilst the current intermediates produced by Pirelli don't have quite as wide an operating range, they seem to perform acceptably - it's the full wet tyres where things seem trickier, which, given that the F1 teams tend to be much more reluctant about testing in full wet conditions, does make collecting data to develop those tyres more difficult. After all, there were supposed to be a number of dedicated "wet weather" testing days in the off season this year for Pirelli's benefit, but the track dried out so quickly that they were struggling to make sure it was wet enough for the conditions to be representative and eventually they abandoned the notion.