turbof1 wrote:It does raise a point: the rules, written and inwritten, aren't as clear as they should be, atleast towards the fans. How many of you for instance heard of the yellow-red striped flag? Who knows the difference between a full yellow light and a blinking one?
If even commentators get confused by it, then perhaps the rules should be simplified and above all, all of them written.
Standard FIA flagging rules:
Red / Yellow Striped = oil/water*/debris on track (* = significantly more water here than elsewhere)
Standing Yellow (or solid yellow light) = danger ahead, no passing, track itself is clear
Waving Yellow (or flashing yellow light) = danger ahead, no passing, something *big* (like a car) is on the track
Green Flag = passing may resume
If you have a waving yellow (which would be immediately before the danger), you should have a standing yellow at the two flagging stations before the waving yellow and a waving green immediately after the waving yellow.
I don't know about FIA rules regarding lights, but I know that other series that borrow/clone FIA rules that I've flagged for (IRL, SCCA, Grand AM) say that the flags held in the marshals hands are all that count regarding "no passing" zones - the lights are purely for driver assistance and have no merit regarding rulings.