A fine means nothing to these guys....grid positions is more effective.....myurr wrote:Agree - but when you've got a bright green light shining at you saying that the zone is clear, picking out the waved flags next to it when you're concentrating on all the other things going on in the cockpit could be a little tricky.raymondu999 wrote:I agree it's harsh that they should be penalized for something that happened in FP; without any meaningful impact on their race and/or qualifying results - but I guess it's more towards health and safety though. Like what would've happened if Lewis' brakes had gone putty as he entered the section...
Is it really different in this instance to things like speeding in the pit lane? Given some of the things that other drivers have managed to get away with this year it does seem particularly harsh. Wouldn't a fine have been better? Yet again it would appear that the FIA are unable of being consistent.
The only thing that is a positive is that at least the championship is over now so that the FIA aren't meddling in that. It does probably mean that we're in for another Vettel cruise snooze fest on Sunday though, at the front at least.
The problem is that yes – it was endangering real people, but if the drivers had no way to know that (flashing green lights beside the track, flashing yellow light on the wheel turned off), what are they meant to do?raymondu999 wrote:I think the thing with this one myurr is that it was potentially endangering real people - what if someone had a brake failure at 250 kph while marshals were on track? FP pit lane speeding gets fined if I remember correctly but you never get close to those kinds of speeds
I guess marshall's flags have highest priority. These guys see everything first and can start waving the flats immediately after something happened. The FIA light may come on later as the information takes some time to read race control. Also, remember that the light are an electronic system and it might fail.raymondu999 wrote:I didn't watch FP or follow live timing earlier on so I can't speak for any of those - but I guess it's kind of a case of worst case rules? i.e. between track lights; steering wheel LEDs; and marshall flags (if they're all visible) if one is showing a "higher" alert level than the other two, that should be the one that drivers default to?
Having said that I don't know what exactly happened - maybe the double yellow flags were right next to a flashing green light? And you get that effect when you look at something bright and everything else goes darker? I don't know.
This was the other way round. The car had been cleared and the FIA signalled to everyone that the yellow flags had been removed. However it seems that some marshalls were still on track and there were waved yellows at that point.vall wrote:I guess marshall's flags have highest priority. These guys see everything first and can start waving the flats immediately after something happened. The FIA light may come on later as the information takes some time to read race control. Also, remember that the light are an electronic system and it might fail.raymondu999 wrote:I didn't watch FP or follow live timing earlier on so I can't speak for any of those - but I guess it's kind of a case of worst case rules? i.e. between track lights; steering wheel LEDs; and marshall flags (if they're all visible) if one is showing a "higher" alert level than the other two, that should be the one that drivers default to?
Having said that I don't know what exactly happened - maybe the double yellow flags were right next to a flashing green light? And you get that effect when you look at something bright and everything else goes darker? I don't know.
The problem is that the track side lights and lights on the steering wheel were introduced because the flags were near impossible to see. It's entirely conceivable that these drivers saw green lights, saw no yellow flashing light on their dash, but didn't see any marshals with flags.vall wrote:I guess marshall's flags have highest priority. These guys see everything first and can start waving the flats immediately after something happened. The FIA light may come on later as the information takes some time to read race control. Also, remember that the light are an electronic system and it might fail.raymondu999 wrote:I didn't watch FP or follow live timing earlier on so I can't speak for any of those - but I guess it's kind of a case of worst case rules? i.e. between track lights; steering wheel LEDs; and marshall flags (if they're all visible) if one is showing a "higher" alert level than the other two, that should be the one that drivers default to?
Having said that I don't know what exactly happened - maybe the double yellow flags were right next to a flashing green light? And you get that effect when you look at something bright and everything else goes darker? I don't know.
There's a video here: http://www.f1arab.com/2011/10/28/indian ... st-in-fp2/myoozikk wrote:Wow has anyone got a recording of the Ferrari front wing flex. I've seen nothing like that before.