Mea culpa. Black with orange circle.ISLAMATRON wrote:Black flag him how? when? His tire fell off the same lap he came out of the pits, he never passed by the start finish line... how would he be black flagged then?
Trying to pawn it off on the stewards is absurd. Team fault no doubt, and if they had told Alonso I doubt they would have been dealt with so harshly, unfortunately the fans have to suffer for Renaults' stupidity.
They should let them run but deny any WCC points.
I don't think I said they should be banned. I may have though. What I've said the whole time is if Renault deserve a penalty, then so do Brawn. Because in their case it almost killed someone. I agree with you on the fine thing.jddh1 wrote:But you don't ban a team for that. You fine the heck out of them, but not ban them from a race.Ray wrote:Xpensive, Renault never told Alonso the wheel was loose even after he radioed them saying he thought he had a flat. That was after they sent the car out knowing full well the wheel wasn't even close to being on all the way. I would say that was much more dangerous than what happened with Brawn, even though I think they both deserve a penalty.
I think the FIA is doing this on purpose to push Renault to quit F1 and I guess prove their point that car makers can leave the sport whenever they want.
/end conspiracy theory
*sigh* Have you read anything in this thread? The two cases are completely different. Renault deserve a penalty because they released a car that they knew was most likely going to lose a wheel, and they then failed to tell the driver even after he radioed in thinking he had a puncture! Its the face they didn't tell Alonso, if he had known his wheel wasn't fixed on properly he might have driven slower or even pulled over through common sense.Ray wrote:I don't think I said they should be banned. I may have though. What I've said the whole time is if Renault deserve a penalty, then so do Brawn. Because in their case it almost killed someone. I agree with you on the fine thing.jddh1 wrote:But you don't ban a team for that. You fine the heck out of them, but not ban them from a race.Ray wrote:Xpensive, Renault never told Alonso the wheel was loose even after he radioed them saying he thought he had a flat. That was after they sent the car out knowing full well the wheel wasn't even close to being on all the way. I would say that was much more dangerous than what happened with Brawn, even though I think they both deserve a penalty.
I think the FIA is doing this on purpose to push Renault to quit F1 and I guess prove their point that car makers can leave the sport whenever they want.
/end conspiracy theory
I do partly agree with you on the Renault thing, it does appear to be just a complete melt down in communication. Starting from when the lollipop man didn't seem to acknowledge a problem on the front right.xpensive wrote:The Renault case still comes across like an unfortunate chain of human errors to me.
If they were truly aware that they screwed-up the wheel-change, why would they deliberately keep that information from their star driver and perhaps biggest asset?
Doesn't make much sense to me anyway?
The way I see things in the Brawn case, they failed to secure a vital non-changeable suspension part to the chassis, which to my mind is technical negligence.
Barrichello underlined it was broken not undone.Diesel wrote:I don't know where all these theories about loose bolts etc. came from, but you have to provide a source before throwing serious allegations like that in to the ring.
You also made the oil camparison in the other thread. I don't think you have ever answered my question to provide data on that.xpensive wrote: My only defence on the matter is that I behold the Renault race-ban totally inappropriate and was trying to make a relevant comparison, which failed miserably.
Yeah I have read what's in this thread. I'll say it again. Brawns' negligence damn near killed another competitor. YOU need to learn to read, I've posted time and again the link to an Autosport interview stating the situation at Brawn and what Rubens had to say about it. I suggest you read it again, or for the first time it seems. They knew something was wrong, and chose not to investigate it. I don't give a damn what they were doing, qualifying, race, or practice. I will not repeat this again, so thick skulls around here can figure it out on it their own. I guess their investors put too much money into their coffers for them to care what might happen.Diesel wrote:*sigh* Have you read anything in this thread? The two cases are completely different.......
Brawn allowed their car to run in Qualy apparently knowing it had damage......
The difference is Renault allowed a car to run which they know was most likely going to lose a wheel on track. Brawn allowed a damaged car to run because they didn't now know it was going to fail so dramatically and distribute debris all over the track.
The other question is was Renaults punishment fair? Probably not, but they got made an example out of.
Could you either add to the discussion or go away? If you don't want to read it there are thousands of other threads to entertain you.richard_leeds wrote:Could a mod please put this thread out of its misery
I was referring to the level of personal abuse. For example "You need to learn to read"... "why the --- can't you..." ... "READ. You just might learn something. FFS."Ray wrote:Could you either add to the discussion or go away? If you don't want to read it there are thousands of other threads to entertain you.
Okay. Enjoy your stay at F1technical.richard_leeds wrote:I was referring to the level of personal abuse. For example "You need to learn to read"... "why the --- can't you..." ... "READ. You just might learn something. FFS."Ray wrote:Could you either add to the discussion or go away? If you don't want to read it there are thousands of other threads to entertain you.
It's rather tiresome.
To paraphrase whiteblue, some people need find a quiet corner.
As modbaraban said "This isn't going anywhere. Enough said."