Sargeant crashes at 2023 Singapore GP, drives back to the pits with damaged front wing,
Only thing I can think of is they consider the FW repairable and the rear not
I posted above re teh read win not being replaceable but I guess you could argue on pure safety grounds some sharp carbon fibre puncturing someone elses tyre coming to a high speed corner it close to a concrete barrier could easily be considered dangerous tooringo wrote: ↑11 Jun 2024, 01:20The thing that stands out is the situation.
I see the comparisons to other cases, but if your car is in the barriers and cannot be repaired to race, then it should be retired from the race.
That's the difference. Those other case like Hamilton on 3 wheels or Piastri front wing. The car was moving on track and not parked in a barrier.
If you have a puncture or broken wing while on track and in motion then by all means keep driving and return to the pits for a repair to continue racing safely.
If there is a final lap and the race ends by crossing the line then its okay to do so.
That's the distinction that i find should influence the severity of the penalty in the case of Checo. Does a car pitched out of the track with severe damage rejoin just to retire in the pits?
A rear wing cannot be replaced at a pit stop.
Secondly the rear crash structure can also be damaged and should another car crash into it then that endangers checo and the driver in the other car.
If a front wing lost the crash structure completely, then it should be retired. An end plate or wing elements does not expose the driver to a solid impact.
I was a bit harsh in using the terms manipulation and piquet.
I think for the above reasons stated my intention was to hilight that the incident was more serious than the penalty would suggest.
Redbull would have known the risks and decided that Checo should try to return to avoid the SC. It's obvious that Checo was immobile. Most times a car is retired from a race in the pits, it's racing on the track and not parked. So this was done by the team or team player Checo not to save the engine or to try a repair. It was likely done to not draw out a safety car.
A similar tactic was used by Tsunoda and Alfa Tauri in the Dutch Grand Prix but with an opposite effect. I beleive he came the pits then was told to get back out there and continue running despite the car being in no condition to run and then he brought out the safety car which effectively closed up the race and brought redbull into contention.
He wouldn't be at the barriers because the crash was not substantial. This is proven by the fact that he spent no more than 2 seconds stationary.
It actually can. You're allowed to park your car in the garage under a pit stop. There's just no point in racing because it takes too long.