Hamilton compares tires to ‘balloons’, feared explosion

Lewis Hamilton 70th Anniversary Grand Prix

Mercedes’ British driver Lewis Hamilton is seen after the F1 70th Anniversary Grand Prix at Silverstone on August 9, 2020 in Northampton. The race commemorates the 70th anniversary of the inaugural world championship race, held at Silverstone in 1950. (Photo by Frank Augstein / POOL / AFP)

Lewis Hamilton compared his Pirelli tires to balloons on Sunday after he and his Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas suffered serious blistering problems at the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix.

Just a week after his dramatic victory on three wheels, with a punctured fourth, at the British Grand Prix, Hamilton admitted he was afraid one of his tires might explode.

Three cars had suffered tire failures at Silverstone last weekend, but Pirelli pressed ahead with a decision to introduce softer tires running at higher pressures than previously, much to the concern of many teams.

The two Mercedes drivers finished second and third in an unexpected upset result that saw Red Bull’s Max Verstappen storm to his first win of the season and ninth of his career.

Hamilton said Mercedes had struggled with their tires and had no immediate answer to the problem.

“It was a massive challenge today,” he said. “But congratulations to Red Bull, and to Max. They did a great job.

“They didn’t have the problems that we had and it was unexpected for us to have the blistering as hard-core as we experienced.”

He said he was glad to have survived the race without a puncture and to have found some pace to claim second at the finish.

“I’m grateful to have progressed like I did. I was pushing pretty heavily.

“The team will work hard now to identify our tire problems. Pirelli had tire failures last week – and then the pressure (tire pressure) on them goes up and up and up so they’re like balloons, you know?

“I’m not sure anyone else struggled with blistering like we did so we’ll look into it.”

Hamilton said he was nervous in the car as he managed his tires.

“That middle stint, even in the first one, I started to fall back to Max. I was managing the tires like you couldn’t below.

“In the middle stint, one half was bald and the other half was ok. At the end, I was driving with half a tire! I was afraid it was going to explode.”

Bottas was frustrated by both his tire problems and his Mercedes team’s strategy decisions.

“It was frustrating for us,” he said.

“My strategy was far from ideal and there are lots to learn from today. It was an opportunity to win, from pole, and I had an opportunity to keep up with Max, but as soon as I started to push the tires just fell apart.

“Blistering was an issue for us and it seemed that Red Bull had none, so they had an edge. Tires just over-heat. It’s basically boiling. You get holes in the tires and then you just lose grip.”

Verstappen’s first win of 2020, and ninth of his career, enabled him to leap-frog Bottas and take second, 30 points behind Hamilton in the drivers’ championship.

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