ISLAMATRON wrote:Yes, as soon as the correct evidence is presented to you, differing from the false one you provided to support your argument, it suddenly has no relevance to the core of the argument, classic loser's tactic.
F1.com has been wrong before.
Your assumption is you have the correct information.
Regardless, it is irrelevant.
Alonso pitted prior to the crash. The Red bulls pitted after the crash but before the safety car was deployed.
The key factor is that Renault would have had to know the Red Bulls could (and would) pit prior to the safety car being deployed.
ISLAMATRON wrote:
Note that your reading comprehension suffers, spinning on purpose is attributed to HK, not to PK, big advantage is attributed to LH & FA, regardless of how/why their teammate hypothetically spun.
You did not say hypothetically. You asserted "just as it happened to FA" that is a clear inference of intent on Piquet's part.
If you were writing a statement of work for an engineering company, you'd get crapped on from a great height on the back of that statement.
ISLAMATRON wrote:
kilcoo316 wrote:Was Alonso at the head of the field when the safety car came in after Piquet's crash?
Yes or no.
Yes, he was the first car that did not need to pit or serve a penalty, that is all that matters
If you want to be pedantic and argue over lap numbers 12/13/14/15...
WAS ALONSO AT THE HEAD OF THE FIELD WHEN THE SAFETY CAR PITTED... YES OR NO?
(I would like to think a simple binary answer would not be beyond you)
ISLAMATRON wrote:FA did not need a blocker, his 1st pit was long and took alot of fuel(more evidence that it may have been planned) and so therefore LH pitted a grand total of 1 lap later than FA on the 2nd pitstop, FA could have kept up enough gap without DC to prevent being leapfrogged by the 1 lap difference.
Absolute rubbish. Absolute rubbish and you know it.
Having to get out and do a lap on relatively cold (and unknown tyres) costs the driver that pits first significant amounts of time.
We have seen dozens of examples where 1 lap is enough to overtake the driver that pitted first.
I also notice you have disregarded the two Ferraris. Interesting considering Massa was the fastest man of the weekend, and would have had an even greater probability of beating Alonso.
ISLAMATRON wrote:Tell me how much gap would he need to protect himself from the 1 lap later that LH ran after FA's 1st pit stop? more than the 1 sec last year's cars had to stay away from each other to not lose all the aero?
1 second between cars due to aerodynamics?
How on earth did Hamilton manage to overtake Coulthard
if he could not get within 1 second of him?
Hmmm.... does not compute.
You'll need to go back and dream up another argument that is not built on quicksand.