so please , don't hate just accept they had really bad qalificatons and thats it
PS, the diference between the soft and hard compound is around 1 second

First of all welcome to the forum.aladinmk wrote:I registered just to reply, to everybody that says that ferrari was slow , than they weren't listening to the team radio at the end of the race ,mark webber was closing up on alonso , and he got reashured he was on the soft tyres (qicker) and do you remember how it end ????
so please , don't hate just accept they had really bad qalificatons and thats it
PS, the diference between the soft and hard compound is around 1 second
Brake system fluid.Formula None wrote:What's the maple syrup for, and why do they need 2 jars of it?
F1Technical - Brake System wrote:The brake fluid itself is stored in two brake master cylinders, contained in the nose cone and packaged in between the suspension components for space reduction. These master cylinders contain the brake fluid for both the front and rear brakes. The front and rear systems are always connected seperately as required by the technical regulations. Such design allows that either the front or the rear wheels can still slow down the car when one of the circuits would fail.
So, rear brake master cylinder is also in front?mx_tifosi wrote:![]()
Even though the question was [hopefully] intended as a joke, Timbo also deserves an answer. The front and rear brakes are separated in case of either one failing:
F1Technical - Brake System wrote:The brake fluid itself is stored in two brake master cylinders, contained in the nose cone and packaged in between the suspension components for space reduction. These master cylinders contain the brake fluid for both the front and rear brakes. The front and rear systems are always connected seperately as required by the technical regulations. Such design allows that either the front or the rear wheels can still slow down the car when one of the circuits would fail.
Different angles and distances (zoom?).Formula None wrote:...
^ Lot of squat?