18-06-2013, 15:08
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/108128
Adrian Sutil: Force India F1 form shows Pirelli doing nothing wrong
By Edd Straw and Jonathan Noble Tuesday, June 18th 2013, 11:19 GMT
Adrian Sutil says Force India's strength in looking after its tyres shows there is nothing wrong with the job that Pirelli is doing.
Pirelli came under pressure earlier this year to make its products more conservative on the back of a high number of pit stops at some events.
But Sutil thinks that the responsibility for excessive degradation has to be shouldered by teams instead, because his own Force India outfit has shown what it is possible to do.
In Canada, Paul di Resta completed 54 laps on the set of medium tyres that he started the race with.
Speaking about the tyre situation, Sutil said: "Paul's pace was good and it just shows we don't have a tyre problem.
"Everybody talks about Pirelli tyre problems, but it is a good tyre, we saw that in Canada.
"We can do one stop if the car is working properly. I think it was a good race for different strategies.
"I was on a two-stop. I think both would have worked, two-stop and one-stop were very similar."
Force India was one of the outfits that stood firm against a push by rivals to try and change the tyres mid-season.
Sutil fully supports his bosses' stance, which has resulted in Pirelli giving up on plans to tweak its rubber at this stage of the campaign.
"I don't want a compound change. This is not allowed," said Sutil. "We have rules and you have to respect the rules. So you do not change the rules during the season.
"There is nothing more to say. It's not allowed to have a new compound and there is no danger with the tyres.
"We have no problem with the tyres.
"It's just some teams get on a little bit better with the tyres and some others want to change it.
"Let's see what comes out, but I just want the rules to be respected and I don't want a big change of tyres."
The only tweak that Pirelli is now planning is to revise the bonding process of its tyres to minimise the chance of a repeat of the delaminations that affected a number of drivers earlier this year.
Adrian Sutil: Force India F1 form shows Pirelli doing nothing wrong
By Edd Straw and Jonathan Noble Tuesday, June 18th 2013, 11:19 GMT
Adrian Sutil says Force India's strength in looking after its tyres shows there is nothing wrong with the job that Pirelli is doing.
Pirelli came under pressure earlier this year to make its products more conservative on the back of a high number of pit stops at some events.
But Sutil thinks that the responsibility for excessive degradation has to be shouldered by teams instead, because his own Force India outfit has shown what it is possible to do.
In Canada, Paul di Resta completed 54 laps on the set of medium tyres that he started the race with.
Speaking about the tyre situation, Sutil said: "Paul's pace was good and it just shows we don't have a tyre problem.
"Everybody talks about Pirelli tyre problems, but it is a good tyre, we saw that in Canada.
"We can do one stop if the car is working properly. I think it was a good race for different strategies.
"I was on a two-stop. I think both would have worked, two-stop and one-stop were very similar."
Force India was one of the outfits that stood firm against a push by rivals to try and change the tyres mid-season.
Sutil fully supports his bosses' stance, which has resulted in Pirelli giving up on plans to tweak its rubber at this stage of the campaign.
"I don't want a compound change. This is not allowed," said Sutil. "We have rules and you have to respect the rules. So you do not change the rules during the season.
"There is nothing more to say. It's not allowed to have a new compound and there is no danger with the tyres.
"We have no problem with the tyres.
"It's just some teams get on a little bit better with the tyres and some others want to change it.
"Let's see what comes out, but I just want the rules to be respected and I don't want a big change of tyres."
The only tweak that Pirelli is now planning is to revise the bonding process of its tyres to minimise the chance of a repeat of the delaminations that affected a number of drivers earlier this year.
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