To be honest, I wouldn't be surprised if it was morning glory – the poor guy probably just needed a piss!Mandrake wrote:Did anybody else see the massive boner Hamilton had when getting out of the car? He looked down, hesitated for a second and then probably thought "I don't care" and ran towards his crew jumping into them like a horny dog
I agree...I've done plenty of endurance races and i'm quite surprised some Formula 1 drivers just don't let it rip...then again they don't have to suffer as much as Le mans, endurance drivers have to deal with.beelsebob wrote:To be honest, I wouldn't be surprised if it was morning glory – the poor guy probably just needed a piss!Mandrake wrote:Did anybody else see the massive boner Hamilton had when getting out of the car? He looked down, hesitated for a second and then probably thought "I don't care" and ran towards his crew jumping into them like a horny dog
Front grip? How so?Hail22 wrote:Red Bull - Great at one lap pace (Quali) still a lot slower than Ferrari, Macca with regards to front grip, straight line speed and handling (shocking right?).
What's lottery like about that? The lotus and sauber have both shown strong nearly-there-but-not-quite pace all year.fritticaldi wrote:As we saw in the Canadian GP, the outcome of the races are a lottery. The Lotus or Sauber could have won that race.
The De Resta train in the opening stint had the benefit of DRS and cars that were able to go a second a lap faster once he pitted, but they still couldn't make it past. I agree that it looked easy when Hamilton breezed passed Alonso and Vettel, but then he was 2 - 3 seconds a lap faster at that point - the overtake **SHOULD** have been pretty easy with that kind of pace differential. The fact that on some tracks you can be 3 seconds a lap faster than another car and yet still cannot get past is a fundamental problem with F1. The DRS may be a sticking plaster over that, but until they can address that fundamental problem then F1 is better for having DRS than not.Gridlock wrote:Did anyone else think of Jackie Treehorn and his doodle in The Big Lebowski when they saw Newey hurriedly hiding his notebook?
I've only been saying it for 2 years now, but if the FIA want us to believe that DRS is an ongoing experiment then they need to run a race (other than Monaco) without it enabled at all. Imagine the block passes and out braking attempts we'd have seen yesterday without the drivers having the safety net of waiting until the DRS zone and powering past anyone.
Yeh, this highlights something Coulthard was saying about DRS – it can make overtaking harder. If you have one guy trying to overtake, getting the benefit of DRS, who can't get past because he hits the rev limiter, then similarly no one can get past him, because they will all bump the rev limiter as he has his DRS open... result, a trulli train... or in this case a DiResta train.myurr wrote:The De Resta train in the opening stint had the benefit of DRS and cars that were able to go a second a lap faster once he pitted, but they still couldn't make it past. I agree that it looked easy when Hamilton breezed passed Alonso and Vettel, but then he was 2 - 3 seconds a lap faster at that point - the overtake **SHOULD** have been pretty easy with that kind of pace differential. The fact that on some tracks you can be 3 seconds a lap faster than another car and yet still cannot get past is a fundamental problem with F1. The DRS may be a sticking plaster over that, but until they can address that fundamental problem then F1 is better for having DRS than not.Gridlock wrote:Did anyone else think of Jackie Treehorn and his doodle in The Big Lebowski when they saw Newey hurriedly hiding his notebook?
I've only been saying it for 2 years now, but if the FIA want us to believe that DRS is an ongoing experiment then they need to run a race (other than Monaco) without it enabled at all. Imagine the block passes and out braking attempts we'd have seen yesterday without the drivers having the safety net of waiting until the DRS zone and powering past anyone.
Sure, any of them could have won – this doesn't make it a lottery, it makes it a difficult to predict race based on who has the best pace and strategy – great stuff!fritticaldi wrote:@ beelsebob I agee that both the Lotus and Sauber have been quick. Either of them could win races at any moment. The point I was making is that Grosjean started the race with SuperSoft and then went to soft. Perez had the reverse strategy. Perez easily could have been second. Hamilton had the best strategy but only by a whisker. By the way, Button has returned to his performance level he displayed during his Honda years.
Yup, we've seen this a couple of times this year. Once you get into a train it's up to the guy who is second in line to make his move. All the others are stuck in formation, all using DRS.beelsebob wrote:Yeh, this highlights something Coulthard was saying about DRS – it can make overtaking harder. If you have one guy trying to overtake, getting the benefit of DRS, who can't get past because he hits the rev limiter, then similarly no one can get past him, because they will all bump the rev limiter as he has his DRS open... result, a trulli train... or in this case a DiResta train.
Not at all – it means that you're much closer to the rev limit, so overtaking is *harder* because you can't get a significant overspeed.myurr wrote:To me this highlights two very important points. With everyone having DRS it's pretty much the same as no one having DRS
I disagree – for the above reason. Without DRS, the cars would be geared for a slight overspeed to allow for some overtaking (instead of being geared for exactly the overspeed DRS will provide), hence more overtaking would occur with no DRS.In those circumstances then none of the protagonists were able to overtake any of the others, despite it being a track with several overtaking opportunities, despite other cars being held up by the car in front, and despite different strategies being employed. Without DRS it probably would have been a pretty boring race, something F1 needs to take another really hard look at.