Just_a_fan wrote:
A driver who was driving at the time says differently. A driver who won the title during that period 6-10 years ago says differently. Hmm, who do I believe? You or a title-winning F1 driver? Tricky...
You are becoming a one trick pony on this site. All you seem to do is moan about the tyres and claim that anyone who disagrees with you is not a real fan of racing. We all get it - you're not a happy bunny. Any chance you can talk about something else for a while? Perhaps you should complain to the FIA directly as I'm not sure they're members of this forum so your comments probably aren't getting to them.
(from a fan of F1 who presumably has only recently started watching and must have imagined the last 30 years of F1 races he watched...)
i clearly laid out the reasons why Kimi's short sentence cannot really be used to suggest that they weren't having to drive 100%, when all the evidence points to the contrary + testimony from about 5 drivers in the last 2 races alone.
i also said in another post that you cannot strictly use driver comment anyway, due to the level of bias involved, but as things stand there are more drivers who have vocalized dissatisfaction to the current system then those who haven't.
and yes.....i would rather form my own opinion based on available evidence, then simply use 'official' quotes by some racing drivers to dictate my entire thinking.
and i duno what F1 you were watching but when refuelling was around between 1994 till what...2010, and apart from 2005 where there was that odd single set for the race scenario, its clear that tyres were Never a limiting factor. And even then, in 2005,....Michelin built tyres that lasted fully anyway, so you still had a fantastic straight fight between kimi and alonso. There might have been one or 2 oddball races and things like US GP with the michelin fiasco but i cannot recall a time during those years where drivers had to pace themselves, and follow a controlled target lap time (as said by both Button and Webber) to ensure that tyres lasted a stint.
i remember there'd be occassions might have come in for new tyres specifically, because they chose to do a 1 stopper versus 2 stops or something, and play the long game, but the KEY DiFFERENCE in that scenario is it was entirely up to each individual team what they wanted to do, strategy wise. If they thought they could gain more time by staying out and not encountering traffic, they could CHOOSE to do so by putting a load of fuel in and running the tyres down (they certainly didn't have a 'cliff' element about them either).
Here its not, it is a lottery, in that None of the teams know how long the tyres will last, and ALL of them drive at a conservative pace, to see how it pans out. That is unprecedented.
ive been watching f1 since 94, and the driver testimonials from that era seem to backup what i watched and believe happened during that time...plus all the video evidence....from..........every race.