Changing the subject slightly, where is Giblet?! "Last visited: Sun Aug 12, 2012 1:54 pm"Giblet wrote:...
He was my favorite moderator... even before he became a moderator!
Changing the subject slightly, where is Giblet?! "Last visited: Sun Aug 12, 2012 1:54 pm"Giblet wrote:...
Not sure - but if it was the ministries of health being the issue, why make the stronger version for the freer regulations? They'd just centralise on the less concentrated version and leverage on more economies of scale, surely.ParanoiD wrote:Due to the MoH regulation in different country? It is originated from Thai too right?raymondu999 wrote:The Thai version of Krating Daeng (not sure about the Indonesian version) is a LOT stronger.
For new circuits, I'd agree. Perhaps I'd go far as to say that I think they gain even more time. But are you implying that even for circuits such as Sepang or Albert Park, which they practically know all about - their computer simulations (on which they probably run iterative tests to obtain the optimum theoretical laptime) is so inaccurate that it would still produce a setup that's 1 second off the pace?godlameroso wrote:Between FP2 and 3 teams usually find about a second of performance from simply optimizing the car.
That is exactly it: you are describing adrenaline in a fight or flight situation, not at will. When you can push adrenaline conciously, you can channel it. This is something we try to achieve at our training programme: we first push spirit and body to the breaking point, effectively inducing the fight or flight system. After a few weeks of this people slowly start to induce the adrenaline surge by their own, by remembering the feeling, only they are not in a fight or fly situation. They are absolutely calm.Nando wrote:I doubt Adrenaline is to any advantage. It´s a fight or flight system, not a precision system.
In fact i think most crashes in T1 and on the first lap is because of Adrenaline interfering.
After the first lap people start settling down and focusing on the job at hand.
We produce adrenaline for a reason – it's evolutionary advantageous. We survive more often when operating on adrenaline, than when operating not on it, thus the fitness function plus evolution says we make it.Nando wrote:I doubt Adrenaline is to any advantage. It´s a fight or flight system, not a precision system.
In fact i think most crashes in T1 and on the first lap is because of Adrenaline interfering.
After the first lap people start settling down and focusing on the job at hand.