That was all clean because Lewis aborted his attempts because he wasn't going by.komninosm wrote:I think it is, but Schumacher made 3 moves on the start-finish straight in the vid I posted. Right, then left, then right then left to go on the racing line.WilliamsF1 wrote:Is this right?
After a defensive move to hold the position, if the driver behind is still well behind then it is alright to go back to the racing line
Ever think maybe Lewis aborted his attempts because Schumacher was moving around the track dangerously and illegally? Besides Lewis didn't abort anything in the start-finish straigh. He merely went right at top speed which was nearly identical to Schumacher who had no right to make 3 moves. The end, don't be an apologist mate.Mandrake wrote:That was all clean because Lewis aborted his attempts because he wasn't going by.komninosm wrote:I think it is, but Schumacher made 3 moves on the start-finish straight in the vid I posted. Right, then left, then right then left to go on the racing line.WilliamsF1 wrote:Is this right?
After a defensive move to hold the position, if the driver behind is still well behind then it is alright to go back to the racing line
First attempt of Lewis: Schumacher 1 move. Then Lewis fell back and tried again, Schumacher defended again. That's it.
The often quoted example of Lewis in Malaysia was different, there Lewis tried to shake off Petrov over the whole straight. This was one overtaking attempt of Petrov over the whole straight.
Please show me the rule they changed after lewiskomninosm wrote: Lewis in Malaysia broke no rule and the rulebook was changed to prevent it happening again. No matter how people want to spin it, those are facts. Lewis never blocked Petrov, he kept moving out of the way. Ergo they changed the rules and now you can't make more than 1 defensive move. Schumacher made 3, end of story.
flynfrog wrote:Please show me the rule they changed after lewiskomninosm wrote: Lewis in Malaysia broke no rule and the rulebook was changed to prevent it happening again. No matter how people want to spin it, those are facts. Lewis never blocked Petrov, he kept moving out of the way. Ergo they changed the rules and now you can't make more than 1 defensive move. Schumacher made 3, end of story.
F1 Sporting Regulations 2010 wrote:20) DRIVING
20.1 The driver must drive the car alone and unaided.
21) CAR LIVERY
F1 Sporting Regulations 2011 wrote:20) DRIVING
20.1 The driver must drive the car alone and unaided.
20.2 Manoeuvres liable to hinder other drivers, such as more than one change of direction to defend a position, deliberate crowding of a car beyond the edge of the track or any other abnormal change of direction, are not permitted.
20.3 ...
You're absolutely right – it moved from being driving etiquette to being a rule. The fact that it was a rule was what meant that he was not penalised against Petrov, but was for a much lesser offence one year later against alonso. Schumacher's weaving was much more severe than that employed by Hamilton against Alonso, clearly it is penalty worthy.Dragonfly wrote:@beelsebob
The additional text has been for ages in Appendix L of the ISC. They simply took it from there and placed in the F1 sporting regulations. Perhaps, for convenience for the young generation of drivers, who use Google as their information source
Just like the young generation of fans too. I see very funny interpretation of the one move rule (and the rest of them) when Hamilton is the driver in question.
This is the point! On the S/F straight MSC didn't have to defend his position....therefore no penalty is to be applied. Had the straight been 10 miles long, Hamilton would never have gone by.20.2 Manoeuvres liable to hinder other drivers, such as more than one change of direction to defend a position, deliberate crowding of a car beyond the edge of the track or any other abnormal change of direction, are not permitted.
20.3 ...