TFSA wrote: ↑11 Jun 2024, 07:05
ringo wrote: ↑11 Jun 2024, 01:20
A rear wing cannot be replaced at a pit stop.
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.
If the race had been Red Flagged in the Albon/Sainz crash, there's absolutely a possibility they could have replaced the rear wing, if they have one of similar spec available.
They could have even mounted any spec as the race was started. So no parc ferme.
Was it Hungary 21 when a rear wing was repaired under red flag? I think I remember something there...
Generally the discussion on repairable or not is nonsense as no one can judge it. We saw many instances with broken suspensions...in every case it was fine to bring the car back. I would even say that usually a broken front wing that can go under the car is much more dangerous than what we saw here.
ringo wrote: ↑11 Jun 2024, 15:34
It's not me or "Max haters" speculating.
That's the focus of my argument.
You know, that you do not need the "or" in the first sentence, right?
AR3-GP wrote: ↑11 Jun 2024, 16:12
There is no rule that prevents a team from managing their cars in a way that prevents a safety car especially when the car was driveable and the extent of soiling of the track is subjective considering what we have seen numerous drivers get away with in the past, showering the circuit with debris on their way back to the pits.
.....
This is only a perception that arises from other origins.
Do you really want to feed it like this? Why discuss this nonsense?
AR3-GP wrote: ↑11 Jun 2024, 16:12
The only point the stewards have with Red Bull is the argument that the car was in a dangerous condition, which is subjective, and not surprising to see the team and the FIA in a disagreement on this.
Well, on one side I think the penalty is a disaster. I would actually vote for a rule that gives everyone that causes an avoidable safety car one or two penalty points by default. So if Perez, Sainz or Sargeant can not keep it on the track...two points. If someone stops the car with a mechanical fault at a bad spot instead of at least trying to reach the next exit...one point (see the Monza discussion last year on this).
It does not hurt anyone if drivers that crash and change race outcomes with it give young drivers like Bearman a chance. Still I do not understand the grid pen here, this is a slam dunk penalty points situation.
As much as I want drivers to think about putting the car into save positions where they do not cause a SC, I see the point here. Perez lost a major part of the right endplate on the track and was close to loose even more on the next bump. I think that was too much, there they should have instructed him to go into the safe runoff at turn 10, which would not have caused a SC. I think they were sleeping at this moment, which is somehow ok to penalize. They also took nonsense and high risk. If Perez would have lost the rest of the wing on the straight, that would have been the SC...with Perez limping into the RedBull pit and Verstappen behind it would have been awesome...