ummmmm, apart from one of their driver stopping in the wrong box, i'd say the only thing left is a piano falling on lewis hamilton's front wing , or one of the mechanic bolting spare steering wheel instead of a tire during pitsop. given what has happened in last 5 races, i am beginning to strongly expect either of thoseNando wrote:I´ve been sitting and thinking of new creative ways they could spoil their party but i can´t find anymore.
Here's some quotes from drivers, Engineers & Team Principals regarding what kind of downforce track Canada is, which makes Monaco the opposite.Tommy Cookers wrote:Monaco is a LOW Downforce track, because it is slow
(DF depends on the lift coefficient/wing angle and the SQUARE of the speed, so if the speed is slow the wings are set to the steepest angle/max coefficient to get the most DF available at this slow speed)
Monza is a high downforce track. Although the wings are set to a low coefficient/shallow angle, the speed is so great that the DF is higher than Monaco's. That's why low tyre pressures are a problem. The DF is so high that any more would be a problem.
Please explain this to Martin Brundle BSc, James Allen BSc and others !
F1's governing body has declared illegal the 'holes' in the floor of Red Bull's 2012 car.
Rivals teams including Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes had raised concerns about the design at Monaco last weekend, but opted not to protest on the promise that the FIA would issue a clarification prior to Canada next weekend.
"I think the regulation is quite a grey area," Red Bull's Christian Horner acknowledged to Sky Sports, "and I think a clarification will come out before Montreal that will tidy it up through a technical directive."
The crux of the highly-anticipated technical directive was reported by the German media on Saturday.
Named 013-12, the directive reportedly said there is a "misunderstanding" on the basis of a technical regulation about the meaning of a "fully enclosed hole".
It concluded that the design featured on Mark Webber's winning Monaco car is in fact not allowed.
The team and Australian Webber will keep the win, but the RB8 will have to be modified in order to pass scrutineering next weekend in Montreal.
I can see Tommy Cookers' point.Crucial_Xtreme wrote:Getting back somewhat to the discussion(so newer members are not confused) in the Monaco race thread about downforce levels and some people having high downforce & low downforce mixed up. Monaco is a high downforce track & Canada for instance is a low downforce track, not the other way around.[...]Tommy Cookers wrote:Monaco is a LOW Downforce track...
[...]
Monza is a high downforce track...
Yes, I too can see what he's trying to say – unfortunately, his definitions of low and high downforce disagree with the entire rest of the F1 world. More so, his definitions of low and high downforce are pretty much useless, because they reduce to low and high speed – the faster you go, the more downforce you generate.bhallg2k wrote:I can see Tommy Cookers' point.Crucial_Xtreme wrote:Getting back somewhat to the discussion(so newer members are not confused) in the Monaco race thread about downforce levels and some people having high downforce & low downforce mixed up. Monaco is a high downforce track & Canada for instance is a low downforce track, not the other way around.[...]Tommy Cookers wrote:Monaco is a LOW Downforce track...
[...]
Monza is a high downforce track...
Monaco is an inherently low-downforce circuit, which is why teams have to run a high-downforce setup. By the same token, Circuit Gilles Villeneuve is an inherently high-downforce circuit, which is why teams run a low-downforce setup.
I disagree, it's intrinsically less useful. Under Tommy's nomenclanture, a circuit is high downforce simply if it has a very long straight. By contrast, the normal definition allows for describing the characteristics of a very low speed circuit, but where relatively little downforce is needed (e.g. Hungary, compared to Monaco), and for describing a high speed circuit where you must still generate a large amount of downforce (e.g. Spain, as compared to Monza). Tommy categorises Hungary and Monaco in the same boat because neither has a particularly long straight, and it categorises Spain and Monza in the same boat because both have pretty enormous long straights. A useful definition (and the one used by everyone else) makes distinctions between these because you need a very different setup at them.Tommy's nomenclature is intrinsically more accurate, but it all pretty much means the same thing at the end of the day.
The problem is that both are accurate, they just have different meanings.bhallg2k wrote:Accuracy and utility aren't always synonymous.
What? You don't think it can happen again?Mafia wrote:ummmmm, apart from one of their driver stopping in the wrong box, i'd say the only thing left is a piano falling on lewis hamilton's front wing [...]
What I love about that shot is the one red bull mechanic, litterally creased up with laughter.bhallg2k wrote:I know. That's why I said accuracy isn't always synonymous with utility.
What? You don't think it can happen again?Mafia wrote:ummmmm, apart from one of their driver stopping in the wrong box, i'd say the only thing left is a piano falling on lewis hamilton's front wing [...]
Canada is a high point for the team from last year. They're going to want to put in the extra effort to overcome the past faults. They haven't "shown" anything different (I, unfortunately, don't have access to the pit crew training schedule or to the principles) but the track does favor the Macs, Mercs, and Lotus. If they can get the pits right, Maclaren has a driver that handles changing conditions (Button) and a good driver in the full wet/dry (Hamilton). With the single DRS zone, straight-line speed off-the-bat will be important to aid in overtaking/defending.Chuckjr wrote:Why do you think Macca will suddenly get their act together for Canada? What have they shown which says they will be different this go?
They don't need to up their game, just need to demonstrate a normal form and it should give them lots of points. They have been really abnormal so far.Chuckjr wrote:Why do you think Macca will suddenly get their act together for Canada? What have they shown which says they will be different this go?