GTO wrote:GrizzleBoy wrote:GTO wrote:What exactly caused Schumi to retire. If they failed to tighten the wheel nuts properly, his RR tire was still on the car. Why couldn't he have driven back to the pits to fix issue & rejoin race?
It was his front right and it would have been irresponsible for him to drive a car round a track that he couldn't be sure would have four wheels on it at the end of the lap.
He avoided any further potential damage, avoided a possible safety car incident and saved the team money as the stewards took his decision to stop the car safely into account when deciding whether to fine the team for unsafe release.
-R u sure it was front tire? It looked like rear tire mech. that waved his hand.
-What's irresponsible about it? He still has all 4 wheels on. I'v see cars w/ 3 wheels being driven around the track.
-avoid further damage? ...avoid safety car? ...saved the team money? Why are those driver's concerns? That's more of a team/engineer's concerns & decisions to inform the driver about. He's paid to race & finish races.
-unsafe release? I don't believe so. It was a heat of the moment error by mech. I've seen far worse in which the team recv'd. no fine.
I'm quite sure it was the front right guy waving both hands and slapping the ground after Micheal pulled off. Maybe I need to watch again, but I'm pretty sure it's front right.
You're asking what is irresponsible about driving a car from beginning to the end of a lap at drasstically slow pace, while your tyre could at any moment drop off your car as other cars whizz past you at speed of over 300KM/h?
Massa hadhis face screwed up by a tiny spring hitting him at the wrong time. Many argue his brain is also not the same.
John Surtees died instantly when a tyre simply bounced in front of his car and hit his head and he was nowhere near top speed.
The stewards also did fine the team for unsafe release, but stated that Schumachers quick decision to stop the vehicle as soon as he realised the car was unsafe played a factor in how harsh their fine was.
Shrieker wrote:I'm surprised no one has mentioned how McLaren screwed Lewis royally in the 2nd round of pitstops. He basically did all the hard work coming up on Button's tail, and before the 2nd stops the gap between them was fluctuating between 1.9-2.1 secs. Then it suddenly went to 2.6 secs and they brought Lewis in, bringing him out behind Massa's group. 2 laps later they pitted Button and brought him out in front of Massa's group. Everyone's saying how Button missed a shot at victory at the final stop but essentially Lewis was in the same place as him before he got screwed up by pit strategy !
Were his tyres so bad that they decided to pit him and bring him out behind Massa's group ? It makes absolutely no sense at all. He could have gone on 2 or 3 laps more maybe losing between 0.5-1 secs to Button every lap but still come out ahead of Massa's group which was so crucial.
If Lewis' side of the garage is so incompetent I'd be willing to lend a hand. If they aren't...well... I sure as hell don't want to comment on that, Lewis just should get the f**k out of there asap.
At this point in time, it seems that McLaren screwing their drivers out of positions is just a given now.
Noone is really surprised any more it seems.
Do you know that statistically, not a single car has passed a McLaren car on track this season apart from a McLaren? (Hamiltons poor start in Australia and Buttons mistake in Malaysia with the HRT).
McLaren are the only team to have not been overtaken on the track in 2012.
The only time McLaren has been overtaken on the tarmac (not including Buttons mistake) in 2012 is the very second the drivers stop in the pit lane.
McLarens strategy guys have looked less than sub-par since last season and their pit performance is statistically horrible in general this season.