1 DRS zone only:
http://www.gpupdate.net/en/f1-news/2948 ... monaco-gp/
Well, if it were up to me, I say delete EVERYBODY ELSE'S post except minerichard_leeds wrote:Clew wrote:Then why are all posts prior to this one still view-able?richard_leeds wrote:This thread has been cleansed of symptoms of irritable fanbowel syndrome.
Please spare us from driver mythology and idolatry.
You’re right. It's tempting delete all bar 3 or 4 isn't it?
However, race threads are a place where people cheer on the cars as if they are sitting in the grandstand. They’re also a useful decoy to keep the other threads relatively clean of fan comments.
My patience ran out at the pantomime posts:- “Hamilton is the greatest” …. “Oh yes he is”….. “oh no his isn’t”… etc
Obviously it is for a good reason then that it isn't.Clew wrote:Well, if it were up to me, I say delete EVERYBODY ELSE'S post except mine
Who knows? As you well know, clarity can be hard to come by around here.raymondu999 wrote:I think it was more a poor choice of words rather than what he actually meant - IMO he meant going slowly through setup, and "other cars can be setup for more pace in them if they need it"Pierce89 wrote:Ray, I normally agree with you but, he specifically said "going slowly in q3" and "other cars have more pace in them if they need it".
He continues:“We always ask the drivers to brush the barriers as much as possible, because that’s where the lap time comes from,” explains Rob Smedley, who has been Felipe Massa’s race engineer for many a year. “Once, me and a colleague went to watch a race in one of the junior formulae from the entrance to the Swimming Pool section: well, when we saw how close they got to the barriers at over 200 km/h, we said to ourselves that maybe we ought to have a bit more respect for the drivers!”
Personally I'm going to use these in the commentary box and hope for two stops“Mechanical grip counts for a lot as there are hardly any fast corners, only slow ones, some of which are very tight, like the Loews hairpin,” continues Rob. “From an aerodynamic point of view, you therefore look for the configuration with the most downforce, without getting too concerned about drag. On paper, it’s an inefficient choice, but that’s how it works here. From a weight distribution point of view, you try to go as much as possible towards the rear, which needs to be very stiff, coupled to a soft front end to reduce understeer in the slow corners.”
Why not Rosberg? I think it is going to be Rosberg, if Mercedes will win.Vasconia wrote:A little bit of rain expected and low temperatures, Lewis and Nico are good prayers.
Chances for Mercedes are rising, I expect the first victory of Lewis with the german team.