Changes made to Chapel curve kerb ahead of 70th Anniversary GP

It has been revealed that changes have been made to the Chapel curve at Silverstone ahead of this weekend's 70th Anniversary Grand Prix, in response to the recent Pirelli tyre failures.

A section of the kerbing had been removed from the corner, which is part of the high-speed Maggots and Becketts complex, which saw a number of drivers running into the dirt over the weekend, including Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel and Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton.

During last Sunday's British Grand Prix, a number of drivers suffered front left tyre failures in the closing stages of the race, with Pirelli confirming the reason behind the failures was down to the excessive pressures put on the tyres due to the quick layout of the Silverstone circuit.

Drivers also opted to pit earlier and extend their second stint on the hard compound tyres after an accident for AlphaTauri's Daniil Kvyat brought out the safety car, a factor also considered by Pirelli as a cause of the failures.

Despite these issues, Pirelli boss Mario Isola was suspicious that the removed kerbing could have cause some problems with debris being left on the circuit, after a number of drivers revealed that cuts were found on their tyres over the weekend.

Speaking to Insideracing.com, Isola was satisfied that the kerb was being put back in the interest of helping the tyres on the circuit.

“Probably some of the cuts that we found on Friday were caused by that and by the fact that some debris was trapped in the kerb obviously some cuts on the tyre," Isola affirmed.

“They are working around that, it’s a good action, it’s a good idea to have this small modification that is helping the situation.

“Cuts have been a topic of the week, I have to say, because of the fact that in some corners the cars are running wider, going somewhere [into] run-off areas and we had some parts of the circuit where the gravel was coming [on].

“When the tyre is hot it is very soft so that’s why we had some cuts on tyres.”

Holt110

Posts: 1

Keep the tyres and the kerbs. Its a driver issue if they can't stay on the blacktop then slow a little more for the corner. Risk vs Reward

  • 4
  • Aug 7 2020 - 10:32

Replies (5)

Login to reply
  • f1dave

    Posts: 782

    Keep the kerbs, fix the tires !

    • + 1
    • Aug 7 2020 - 01:35
    • Snooky

      Posts: 121

      Don’t fix the tyres! Could you imagine how boring that race would have been without that late drama?

      • + 1
      • Aug 7 2020 - 08:34
  • Holt110

    Posts: 1

    Keep the tyres and the kerbs. Its a driver issue if they can't stay on the blacktop then slow a little more for the corner. Risk vs Reward

    • + 4
    • Aug 7 2020 - 10:32
    • RogerF1

      Posts: 501

      Absolutely spot on, dumbing down another track feature to make driving easier again

      • + 2
      • Aug 7 2020 - 23:44
    • I can agree with this, provided it doesn't get outright dangerous.

      • + 1
      • Aug 8 2020 - 11:16

AZ Azerbaijan Grand Prix

Local time 

AZAzerbaijan Grand Prix

Local time 

World Championship standings 2025

Show full world champion standings

Test calendar

See full test schedule

Related news

Give your opinion!

Will Bottas challenge Hamilton for the world championship in 2020?

Formula 1 Calendar - 2025

Date
Grand Prix
Circuit
-
Bahrain
14 - Mar 16 2025
Australia
21 - Mar 23 2025
China
4 - Apr 6 2025
Japan
11 - Apr 13 2025
Bahrain
18 - Apr 20 2025
Saudi Arabia
2 - May 4 2025
United States of America
16 - May 18 2025
Italy
23 - May 25 2025
Monaco
30 - Jun 1 2025
Spain
13 - Jun 15 2025
Canada
27 - Jun 29 2025
Austria
4 - Jul 6 2025
United Kingdom
25 - Jul 27 2025
Belgium
1 - Aug 3 2025
Hungary
29 - Aug 31 2025
Netherlands
5 - Sep 7 2025
Italy
19 - Sep 21 2025
Azerbaijan
3 - Oct 5 2025
Singapore
17 - Oct 19 2025
United States of America
24 - Oct 26 2025
Mexico
7 - Nov 9 2025
Brazil
21 - Nov 23 2025
United States of America
28 - Nov 30 2025
Qatar
5 - Dec 7 2025
United Arab Emirates
See full schedule

Formula 1 Calendar - 2025

Date
Grand Prix & Circuit
14 - Mar 16 2025
Australia Albert Park
21 - Mar 23 2025
4 - Apr 6 2025
11 - Apr 13 2025
18 - Apr 20 2025
Saudi Arabia Jeddah Street Circuit
2 - May 4 2025
United States of America Miami International Autodrome
16 - May 18 2025
23 - May 25 2025
Monaco Monte Carlo
30 - Jun 1 2025
13 - Jun 15 2025
27 - Jun 29 2025
Austria Red Bull Ring
4 - Jul 6 2025
United Kingdom Silverstone
25 - Jul 27 2025
1 - Aug 3 2025
Hungary Hungaroring
29 - Aug 31 2025
Netherlands Circuit Zandvoort
5 - Sep 7 2025
Italy Monza
19 - Sep 21 2025
Azerbaijan Baku City Circuit
3 - Oct 5 2025
17 - Oct 19 2025
United States of America Circuit of the Americas
24 - Oct 26 2025
7 - Nov 9 2025
Brazil Interlagos
21 - Nov 23 2025
United States of America Las Vegas Street Circuit
28 - Nov 30 2025
5 - Dec 7 2025
United Arab Emirates Yas Marina Circuit
See full schedule
show sidebar