In relation to 21d, the footage is not relevant. As already noted in the ALB Decision (one of the
subjects of this review request) after the race, the evidence available to the Stewards (both
then and now) was not sufficient to accurately and consistently (meaning for every car in every
lap) penalize any [track limit] breaches occurring at the apex of Turn 6. Track limit
infringements are almost universally enforced based on principal video evidence from a fixed
CCTV camera of adequate resolution positioned to clearly see a car’s position in relation to the
track limit boundary. The CCTV camera for Turn 6 did not meet that standard as it did not
cover the apex of the corner. Because onboard cameras are only useful for verifying a breach
when viewing a car in front of the camera car and not the camera car itself, the Stewards
believed they could not accurately and consistently conclude whether a breach occurred for
every car on every lap. Anecdotal usage of trailing car video, which may or may not be
available for any given car’s potential breach at any given time does not meet that accurate
and consistent evidence standard.
Who knows. They always say that they "reviewed video footage", not which footage.chrisc90 wrote:Ermm....Havent the stewards used onboards to call out track limits before? Unless thats just F1/TV replay analysis.
Exactly what part of this decision is a joke?
Nothing here is made up as they go. We know before the race that the Stewards wouldn't be able to police the corner, and the requirements they've put out that the footage must be CCTV with a clear picture isn't unreasonable at all.
So you want consistency for all drivers and teams regardless of suspicion.TFSA wrote: ↑09 Nov 2023, 23:26I mean, imagine if Leclerc got 10 penalties in a race for track limits filmed by a car following him, while Verstappen, who is usually out front and quite a bit of time ahead of everyone else, escaped the same 10 penalties because no car was behind him to film him going off track. This would cause a big scandal. The Stewards are really just taking a fair approach here.
No, because that's random at least. It can't be gamed. Anyone can be scrutinized at any point during a race weekend, and for any reason, it the FIA feels like it. That's a big difference.ValeVida46 wrote:So you want consistency for all drivers and teams regardless of suspicion.
I mean, it would "cause a big scandal" if only some drivers were subject to Steward scrutiny, right?
Interesting perspective given that we have evidence it was gamed, and it wasn't equally implemented.TFSA wrote: ↑10 Nov 2023, 14:08No, because that's random at least. It can't be gamed. Anyone can be scrutinized at any point during a race weekend, and for any reason, it the FIA feels like it. That's a big difference.
However, if a driver knows that the only way to be done for track limits at Turn X is to have another car follow him and film it, he can plan around that. Pit into clean air and cut the track. Pull a gap. And then just start start cutting the corner at will.
So in short: it can be gamed.
Again, at least the rules were the same for everyone here. Teams and drivers were told beforehand that turn 6 didn't have camera coverage.
Albon was penalized, but we don't know for which corner. He was the only driver penalized for track limits over the entire weekend. Two drivers were penalized in the sprint for overtaking off track and gaining a lasting advantage, but that was for turn 15.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑10 Nov 2023, 16:11Interesting perspective given that we have evidence it was gamed, and it wasn't equally implemented.
Some drivers got penalised and others didn't.
TFSA wrote: ↑10 Nov 2023, 16:47Incorrect. Nobody received a penalty for Track Limits at the US GP (two cars received penalties in the sprint for overtaking off the track, but both was for turn 15), and nobody had lap times deleted in the Sprint Shootout or the Quali at turn 6.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑10 Nov 2023, 16:11Interesting perspective given that we have evidence it was gamed, and it wasn't equally implemented.
Some drivers got penalised and others didn't.
Albon was investigated for turn 6, but the result was "No further action", based on the exact arguments that the evidence wasn't sufficient without CCTV.
https://i.imgur.com/MLXro9t.png
It was noted that one or more cars in the race had lap times deleted for turn 6 infringement in the race itself, but it doesn't say which cars, and we can't know which TV footage was used. Maybe the FIA did have some CCTV-footage that was useable depending on where and how the car went off-track.
If you're gonna argue it's a farce, at least get the facts strait.