Well by your definition the fastest man on sunday in melbourne was Jean eric Vergne....stucliff wrote:beelsebob wrote:No, stops absolutely are part of the equation. Being able to do a two stopper absolutely makes your car faster than not being able to do a two stopper. Again, this really is very simple – velocity is the differential in time of distance, and distance is constant. The bottom line is, the Lotus finished first, and therefore had the highest velocity.stucliff wrote:I think that putting STOPS into equation doesn't match the definition of speed. In that case you have to say that the first car on this example
Yes, the first one is faster than the second one, it took 60 minutes to travel the same distance as the other took 65 minutes. Therefore it is faster.Let's say I want to make a 100 km trip. From point A to point B.
If I travel between this two points at an average of 100 km/h it takes me one hour. So I reach point B in 1 hour.
But some other guy take the decision to make it at an average of 120 km/h it should take him 50 minutes to reach point B. But his gas tank only takes gasoline to make an 80 km trip. So he has to stop for 15 minutes to refuel. it takes him one hour and 5 minutes.
is faster than the second one
Are you saying that?
Ok, I think I souldn't keep wasting my time arguing with you.
Keep an eye on your speedometer and be the velocity be with you...
but i will remeber your statements if somehow i get a speeding ticket
As he reached 310.7km/h
Raikonen only reached 306.9km/h
And the winner was??