Certainly curious.
Wow
It's entirely possible that Ocon would not have exceeded track limits after the final warning (b/w flag) had he received it for his actual 3rd off track - not informing the drivers on time and then dishing out penalties is kinda pathetic, there's no other word for it, really.Marble wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 15:45So, during the race itself, race control only had 3 notifications against Ocon (laps 27, 38 and 58).
So during the cool down lap, his team radio with his engineer showed they thought they were safe and Ocon did "a good job managing it".
While in fact, after the protest, he actually had 10 infringements !
He only got to know about his 1st strike (which happened on lap 27) on lap 35 (8 laps after). During this time, he was stuck behind Albon who himself kept going outside the track, so Ocon probably thought he could do it as well, until his engineer notified him on lap 32 that Alton got a black and white flag (Albon himself was only told about his 1st, 2nd, and 3 infringement on lap 31, while his first 4 infringements happened on laps 19, 20 and 25 (x2))
If i understand correctly this means 4 offences is +5s and A SINGLE ADDITIONAL ONE already adds +10s, and then it resets because .... (?)For four infringements, a 5 second time penalty; for five infringements, a 10 second time penalty. Then a “reset” has been allowed due to the excessive number of infringements. The counting of infringements restarts. After another four infringements, a 5 second time penalty will apply; after five, a 10 second time penalty.
That would make for an interesting drivers briefing at motor GP.
It's an easy thing to engineer the track - just form a trough in to which lift out concrete panels can be dropped to cater for the MotoGP crowd. For F1, lift out the panels and fill the trough with gravel (or whatever other impeding mechanism is required). Panels can be moved by the same crane-on-flatbed that is used to pick up and move stranded cars. Easy to do, relatively cheap and covers both car and bike requirements in one system.michl420 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 13:361. The rules were enforced, thats fair.
2. If tomorrow the same race happens again, I bet no one would get a penalty because they driver would just stay on track.
3. Despite it, this things must change, especially on this track, but everywhere. And possible not with a technic gimic.
I would suggest a mobile slippery surface (like astroturf). Of course the simplest thing would be grass or gravel, but it has disadvantages.
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 23:24It's an easy thing to engineer the track - just form a trough in to which lift out concrete panels can be dropped to cater for the MotoGP crowd. For F1, lift out the panels and fill the trough with gravel (or whatever other impeding mechanism is required). Panels can be moved by the same crane-on-flatbed that is used to pick up and move stranded cars. Easy to do, relatively cheap and covers both car and bike requirements in one system.michl420 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 13:361. The rules were enforced, thats fair.
2. If tomorrow the same race happens again, I bet no one would get a penalty because they driver would just stay on track.
3. Despite it, this things must change, especially on this track, but everywhere. And possible not with a technic gimic.
I would suggest a mobile slippery surface (like astroturf). Of course the simplest thing would be grass or gravel, but it has disadvantages.
Ha ha. No, I didn't see your post. It's a pretty obvious solution isn't it? If two simple fans like us can see it, you'd think the boffins would too.chrisc90 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 23:27Just_a_fan wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 23:24It's an easy thing to engineer the track - just form a trough in to which lift out concrete panels can be dropped to cater for the MotoGP crowd. For F1, lift out the panels and fill the trough with gravel (or whatever other impeding mechanism is required). Panels can be moved by the same crane-on-flatbed that is used to pick up and move stranded cars. Easy to do, relatively cheap and covers both car and bike requirements in one system.michl420 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 13:361. The rules were enforced, thats fair.
2. If tomorrow the same race happens again, I bet no one would get a penalty because they driver would just stay on track.
3. Despite it, this things must change, especially on this track, but everywhere. And possible not with a technic gimic.
I would suggest a mobile slippery surface (like astroturf). Of course the simplest thing would be grass or gravel, but it has disadvantages.
You’d have thought you quoted by post with that idea lol
I have a solution no one's suggested yet. Stewards in the car.michl420 wrote: ↑03 Jul 2023, 13:361. The rules were enforced, thats fair.
2. If tomorrow the same race happens again, I bet no one would get a penalty because they driver would just stay on track.
3. Despite it, this things must change, especially on this track, but everywhere. And possible not with a technic gimic.
I would suggest a mobile slippery surface (like astroturf). Of course the simplest thing would be grass or gravel, but it has disadvantages.
Yeah!! I counted four. One after his first flag.