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Bridgestone heads home for the
sixteenth round of the FIA Formula One World Championship which takes place
in Bridgestone’s homeland of Japan at the Fuji Speedway.
Although the name Bridgestone may not sound Japanese, the company was
founded in 1931 in Japan and the name is a clever translation of the name of
its founder, Mr Ishibashi. Ishibashi, in Japanese, means ‘stone bridge’ (ishi:
stone and bashi: bridge) and the aims for the company were always
international, hence the translated modification of the name.
Today Bridgestone is the world’s largest producer of rubber products, so its
yearly production of around 60,000 Bridgestone Potenza Formula One tyres is
not so substantial when Bridgestone makes 16.9 percent of the world’s
production of tyres [based on 2007 data].
Bridgestone’s Formula One tyres are produced in Japan in a special
department of a production facility located in Tokyo.
“Our Formula One tyres are produced in a factory that makes passenger
vehicle and truck and bus tyres, although in a special department with high
security due to the advanced technology we use in our motorsport tyres,”
explains Hirohide Hamashima, Bridgestone Director of Motorsport Tyre
Development.
The method of production for a Formula One tyre is almost the same as that
of a passenger vehicle tyre. Whereas the manufacture of a tyre for a road
car or commercial vehicle is a highly automated process to ensure the
consumer gets the best possible product at the most competitive price, the
highly specialised nature of a Formula One tyre and the relatively low
volumes involved means there is a greater amount of human intervention in
their production.
“When we manufacture Formula One tyres there is a lot of human
intervention,” says Hamashima, “especially during the assembly process. This
is a very important factor in making the green tyre, which is what we call
the tyre before vulcanisation.
“Formula One tyres are made on a dedicated production line, but in the same
factory which makes passenger car and truck tyres, as well as many prototype
tyres. The machinery is similar to that used for making commercial tyres for
the roads, but we do not see road tyres of the size we see made for Formula
One, and the compounds used on a race track would not last long if we tried
to use them on the road.”
The tyres are also all subject to high levels of checking and quality
control to ensure they meet Bridgestone’s and the teams’ high standards.
On top of Bridgestone’s measures, motorsport’s governing body, the
Federation International de L’Automobile (FIA), issues a bar code for every
tyre produced, and determines who gets which individual tyre.
“This is a very fair system so nobody can accuse us of bias towards any
particular team,” says Hamashima, “as our measures and the FIA’s measures
make it impossible to favour any particular competitor, even if we wanted to
do so.”
The production facility which makes Bridgestone’s Formula One Tyres also
produces tyres for MotoGP and the GP2 Asia Series, as well as domestic
motorsport in Japanese series.
“We make motorsport tyres for a variety of categories and there have been
many successes on our tyres made in Japan,” says Hamashima. “Recently we saw
Valentino Rossi win the MotoGP riders’ championship using Bridgestone tyres,
and this was particularly good for us as he took the title in Japan, at the
Twin Ring Motegi.”
As well as having production based in Japan, Bridgestone’s technical centre
is located in Tokyo and it’s here where all the information gathered
throughout the year is analysed and used to improve Bridgestone’s knowledge.
“Over a race weekend or at a test we accumulate a large amount of
information and this data is all used to help us develop our knowledge so we
can make better products in the future,” explains Hamashima. “It’s all part
of the process of ongoing development.” |