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[-Xgcdugas wrote:Red Bull gives you wings.... LOL![]()
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True, but Race Control in run by committee, and everyone has their say, all the stewards need to be in consensus and discuss the issues at hand, whilst they consult the rule book etc. You will never get fast decisions whilst it's run in this manner.myurr wrote:Even then it took them 5 laps (at safety car speed) to issue the penalty. And this is for a clear cut jump start where the electronics tell them instantly that he was in the wrong.Shaddock wrote:'Jump Starts' flag up on the Race Control computer as soon as they happen via the cars transponder and a receiver in the track.Robert_Kubica wrote:Anyone, on which lap did Fernando Alonso receive his drive-thru penalty for the false start in China?
*cough*engineguru00 wrote: ... Did MaClaren mean to ...
Maybe what we need are some of these old school antics coming back again
Precisely why I'm saying it's not unusual for a decision to take a few laps and that it's not a conspiracy.Shaddock wrote:True, but Race Control in run by committee, and everyone has their say, all the stewards need to be in consensus and discuss the issues at hand, whilst they consult the rule book etc. You will never get fast decisions whilst it's run in this manner.myurr wrote:Even then it took them 5 laps (at safety car speed) to issue the penalty. And this is for a clear cut jump start where the electronics tell them instantly that he was in the wrong.
I've been lurking here for some time, and I just had to sign up to congratulate you on your insightful comment. The last ten or so pages of this thread have been full of conspiratorial rubbish, and I think you nailed Hamilton's thought process perfectly.feynman wrote:I definitely don't think it was the case here.
More like: 'should I go, no wait, no hold on I can make it, bugger too late ...'
This is a fair set of statements. In all likelyhood there was no conspiracy, and no intentional wrong doing on the part of the stewards or race control.I honestly believe he had no nefarious thoughts about 'blocking' Alonso. The guy was in a complicated situation (so complicated it took the stewards ~30 laps to make a decision on) and was both indecisive and unsure of the rules. Simple as that. If there is one entity that should take the blame it's the FIA for having such convoluted rules that neither the drivers, the teams or the stewards can easily interpret them.
Really? LOL poor Lotus, the car must really suck.gilgen wrote:The camera shows Kovi braking, but who can say that Webber did not brake late? In fact, it has been reported that telemetry shows that Kovi braked at the same point on the previous lap. Ther is no stewards enquiry, so they must be satisfied that it was a racing accident!mangesh wrote:Weber's car camera view clearly shows kovalainen breaking early, so this is not the right reasonMark Webber wrote:
"The telemetry showed that he braked 80 meters earlier for that corner than I had on the previous lap, so it was completely unexpected."
Source please. That sounds retarded if it really happened like that.engineguru00 wrote:This whole safety car incident reminds me of something that happened in NASCAR (gasp!) a few years ago. Different series, but racing strategies carry rather well. Car that was leading was being black flagged. The crew chief told the driver to stay out while he "argued" with the marshalls as to why they were being black flagged. Car crosses finish line in 1st place, takes the points and a large cash prize, and pays a $5000 fine for failing to come in when black flagged.
Did MaClaren mean to overtake the safety car? Who knows and we never will. Will they say they intentionally overtook it? No way, but it worked out well. Should Ferrari be angry? Maybe, but it is racing.
Maybe what we need are some of these old school antics coming back again.
I cannot follow that view. Ferrari and Alonso had a wild attack of toys out of the pram but F1 in general had simply one more day with a incompetent safety car rule. That is nothing new. It has happened a lot over the last four or five years.jwielage wrote:IMO yesterday did a lot of damage to the sport's reputation.
Weber's car camera view clearly shows kovalainen breaking early, so this is not the right reasonMark Webber wrote:
"The telemetry showed that he braked 80 meters earlier for that corner than I had on the previous lap, so it was completely unexpected."
I don't think I buy this 80m malarkey.Mark Webber wrote:
"The telemetry showed that he braked 80 meters earlier for that corner than I had on the previous lap, so it was completely unexpected."