Overtaking 6 people on lap 1 was down to pit stop mayhem? o.OHail22 wrote:It may not be due to his driving...but more or less the teams strategy...or the pit stop mayhem...beelsebob wrote:I find it interesting that most people have put Hamilton lower in the race than qualifying if it's wet... Remember, this is the place that Hamilton overtook a large chunk of the grid in half a wet lap last year.
I'm going all three days with the Mrs, I will be free moving fri and sat but unfortunately Sunday I will be staking my claim at the front.. or trying to from early on, and unable to move! General Admission tickets being the cause.. Probably going to go luffield on the Sunday, anyone going on the friday make sure you stand near the fencing at Becketts it's a must for any F1 fan.NathanOlder wrote:Im going on sunday
Im going with a group of 9. Inclyuding my other half (her first race) my first since Monaco 06!
I will be sitting at Stowe in block A.
anyone else in that area ?
I'm talking about how you stated "I find it interesting that most people have put Hamilton lower in the race than Qualifying"beelsebob wrote:Overtaking 6 people on lap 1 was down to pit stop mayhem? o.OHail22 wrote:It may not be due to his driving...but more or less the teams strategy...or the pit stop mayhem...beelsebob wrote:I find it interesting that most people have put Hamilton lower in the race than qualifying if it's wet... Remember, this is the place that Hamilton overtook a large chunk of the grid in half a wet lap last year.
Ahhhh, I see, yeh... fair point =D>Hail22 wrote:I'm talking about how you stated "I find it interesting that most people have put Hamilton lower in the race than Qualifying"
He would be great...only if his team could catch up and stop eating fatty sausage rolls and making mistakes in pit stops...
Actually, there's very little difference now between wet/dry setup for cars.mx_tifoso wrote:It's mainly down to set up, so calm down with the "amazing wet weather drivers". If you're car is ready for dry only, you're screwed if it rains. And vice versa.
Imo.
Canada 2011 showed he (Schumacher) can drive mighty good in the wet .raymondu999 wrote: But I personally think these two are the standout wet drivers, and maybe Schumi, if he can remember the password he set to the "How to drive in the wet" PDF file in his brain. Alonso, I think is good in the wet. Very good in fact, but not anywhere near Vettel/Hamilton/Schumi V1, at least in terms of wet weather pace.
Driver ability - Yes. Setup - Double yes. When I can't drive with my dry set up in wet race in a mere game, F1 2011, I can't imagine how one can manage in a real race. Unless we're merely trying to bring the car home, nevermind what position we finish in.zyphro wrote:Actually, there's very little difference now between wet/dry setup for cars.mx_tifoso wrote:It's mainly down to set up, so calm down with the "amazing wet weather drivers". If you're car is ready for dry only, you're screwed if it rains. And vice versa.
Imo.
Some cars with different characteristic will work better in the wet (i.e Alonso's Ferrari in Malaysia and Button being able to put heat into those tyres in Canada).
Driver ability is very important in the wet.
i do not agreeraymondu999 wrote:beelsebob - Yes, but that was a different car, and different tyres.
This year we've yet to really see a "true" barometer of wet weather drivability and pecking order. Malaysia was there, but back then nobody really had much of an idea of setting up the tyres well. I remember distinctly comparing the race laptimes against Friday practice, based on laptimes as well as the feedback drivers were giving over the radio, and the Ferrari and Sauber were constantly overheating their fronts, and that seems to have continued into a pattern where that overheating helped them get heat into the wets.
I think Vettel and Hamilton are both very good in the wet. To be honest nobody on the current grid has been consistently good in the wet. Vettel has Monza 2008, Fuji 2007 and China 2009. Korea 2010 too had his engine held on, and probably Canada 2011 had it stayed wet. But he spun out with nobody behind or ahead of him in close proximity in Malaysia.
Hamilton has also had amazing drives in the wet - Fuji 2007, Silverstone 2008, China 2011 and Monza 2008 come to mind. But again - he too has c*cked up in the wet. Hockenheim 2010 practice spinning out in the wet, and doing several 360 spins in China 2009.
But I personally think these two are the standout wet drivers, and maybe Schumi, if he can remember the password he set to the "How to drive in the wet" PDF file in his brain. Alonso, I think is good in the wet. Very good in fact, but not anywhere near Vettel/Hamilton/Schumi V1, at least in terms of wet weather pace.
Jackuar wrote:Setup - Double yes. When I can't drive with my dry set up in wet race in a mere game, F1 2011, I can't imagine how one can manage in a real race.
He hasn't really been consistent in wet races. Belgium 2010 and Canada 2011 were pretty poor, nothing spectacular.radosav wrote:i do not agreeraymondu999 wrote:beelsebob - Yes, but that was a different car, and different tyres.
This year we've yet to really see a "true" barometer of wet weather drivability and pecking order. Malaysia was there, but back then nobody really had much of an idea of setting up the tyres well. I remember distinctly comparing the race laptimes against Friday practice, based on laptimes as well as the feedback drivers were giving over the radio, and the Ferrari and Sauber were constantly overheating their fronts, and that seems to have continued into a pattern where that overheating helped them get heat into the wets.
I think Vettel and Hamilton are both very good in the wet. To be honest nobody on the current grid has been consistently good in the wet. Vettel has Monza 2008, Fuji 2007 and China 2009. Korea 2010 too had his engine held on, and probably Canada 2011 had it stayed wet. But he spun out with nobody behind or ahead of him in close proximity in Malaysia.
Hamilton has also had amazing drives in the wet - Fuji 2007, Silverstone 2008, China 2011 and Monza 2008 come to mind. But again - he too has c*cked up in the wet. Hockenheim 2010 practice spinning out in the wet, and doing several 360 spins in China 2009.
But I personally think these two are the standout wet drivers, and maybe Schumi, if he can remember the password he set to the "How to drive in the wet" PDF file in his brain. Alonso, I think is good in the wet. Very good in fact, but not anywhere near Vettel/Hamilton/Schumi V1, at least in terms of wet weather pace.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEPgPWIb ... lpage#t=3s[/youtube]
It's been accounted by many technical figures in F1 that, the setup difference transferred nowadays is not what it used to be.Jackuar wrote:Driver ability - Yes. Setup - Double yes. When I can't drive with my dry set up in wet race in a mere game, F1 2011, I can't imagine how one can manage in a real race. Unless we're merely trying to bring the car home, nevermind what position we finish in.zyphro wrote:Actually, there's very little difference now between wet/dry setup for cars.mx_tifoso wrote:It's mainly down to set up, so calm down with the "amazing wet weather drivers". If you're car is ready for dry only, you're screwed if it rains. And vice versa.
Imo.
Some cars with different characteristic will work better in the wet (i.e Alonso's Ferrari in Malaysia and Button being able to put heat into those tyres in Canada).
Driver ability is very important in the wet.