Then ehh, maybe don't make tires that artificially die within 50/100/150km !?
This world really seems ready for a sizeable meteorite impact ...
Then ehh, maybe don't make tires that artificially die within 50/100/150km !?
I think it still saves 2 sets overall for pirelli per driver for each round doing it like this
There is flood not only around the track, but even at the track. The heavy rain will remain at least until tomorrow. The region has had massive rain with flood about 2 weeks ago, so there is just little soaking capacity left which leads to even faster and heavier flooding.
Im not an oracle, but I suspect the circuit will be fine by Friday. If they have to cancel Friday due to delays in the equipment transport, then I'm sure they'll be able to figure out a revised schedule for Saturday and Sunday, unless the circuit is destroyed by the floods.LM10 wrote: ↑16 May 2023, 17:20There is flood not only around the track, but even at the track. The heavy rain will remain at least until tomorrow. The region has had massive rain with flood about 2 weeks ago, so there is just little soaking capacity left which leads to even faster and heavier flooding.
The problem would be the travelling and accomodation of thousands of fans rather than the possibility of light rain and on-track-action.
If the GP doesn't occur, does FIA let teams write off these expenses from cost cap?AR3-GP wrote: ↑16 May 2023, 17:32Im not an oracle, but I suspect the circuit will be fine by Friday. If they have to cancel Friday due to delays in the equipment transport, then I'm sure they'll be able to figure out a revised schedule for Saturday and Sunday, unless the circuit is destroyed by the floods.LM10 wrote: ↑16 May 2023, 17:20There is flood not only around the track, but even at the track. The heavy rain will remain at least until tomorrow. The region has had massive rain with flood about 2 weeks ago, so there is just little soaking capacity left which leads to even faster and heavier flooding.
The problem would be the travelling and accomodation of thousands of fans rather than the possibility of light rain and on-track-action.
Everyone still needs to recoup the cost towards the event that have already been spent by teams, the circuit, and FOM so unless the circuit is washed away, I suspect they will run it. Some mud is not going to stop fans on Saturday or Sunday.
The thing is that it's not just some mud, unfortunately. I'm fairly confident that the circuit would be fine and that the F1 staff would find a way around. However, if the health of thousands of fans is in danger, it's the organizer's responsibility to decide whether the action must go on or not.AR3-GP wrote: ↑16 May 2023, 17:32Im not an oracle, but I suspect the circuit will be fine by Friday. If they have to cancel Friday due to delays in the equipment transport, then I'm sure they'll be able to figure out a revised schedule for Saturday and Sunday, unless the circuit is destroyed by the floods.LM10 wrote: ↑16 May 2023, 17:20There is flood not only around the track, but even at the track. The heavy rain will remain at least until tomorrow. The region has had massive rain with flood about 2 weeks ago, so there is just little soaking capacity left which leads to even faster and heavier flooding.
The problem would be the travelling and accomodation of thousands of fans rather than the possibility of light rain and on-track-action.
Everyone still needs to recoup the cost towards the event that have already been spent by teams, the circuit, and FOM so unless the circuit is washed away, I suspect they will run it. Some mud is not going to stop fans on Saturday or Sunday.