turbof1 wrote:wesley123 wrote:Joie de vivre wrote:so he should have stopped the car, right? it was a failure
imo he should either have stopped at the track, or have pitted immediately. His car was just in a dangerous position with the DRS fully open.
Rules aren't so much clear on what is dangerous. Like said, his car went on just fine. Yes you could argue less rear DF, could overshoot braking points or loose grip in the middle of a corner, but the fact was he didn't. He kept the car perfectly under control without much effort. I'd disagree this particular case was dangerous.
One can also keep the car perfectly under control with a wheel missing, doesnt mean it is safe.
Point is, whether or not Alonso could or could not keep the car on track, he was missing crap loads of df and with that would have a much less predictable car to drive, which makes it "unsafe".
I am not someone who always thinks about safety and tries to apply it everywhere, but if you ask me in a situation like this, or with loose body parts(isnt that already the case btw?), the driver should be forced to pit to have the problem fixed.