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I think all the engines are direct injection.Shrieker wrote:But what was the actual problem ? What was the cause for losing a cylinderI hope it wasn't something as daft as a kaput spark plug or something...
And?OppositeLock wrote:I think all the engines are direct injection.Shrieker wrote:But what was the actual problem ? What was the cause for losing a cylinderI hope it wasn't something as daft as a kaput spark plug or something...
As if the W05 is not fast enough.heimana wrote:updates for sepang?
The new nose maybe?heimana wrote:updates for sepang?
Sounds as if he was listening to the Sky commentary!beelsebob wrote:And?OppositeLock wrote:I think all the engines are direct injection.Shrieker wrote:But what was the actual problem ? What was the cause for losing a cylinderI hope it wasn't something as daft as a kaput spark plug or something...
How hard can it be to tell two drivers they have one new wing each, if you f*ck it up you´ll get the old wing.andrewf1 wrote: - one of the reasons why the new front wing didn't end up being used is because they only had 1 for each driver. it was deemed wise to avoid a situation similar to what happened with Red Bull at Silverstone 2010
Well he doesn't have to screw up, one wing failure is enough...SectorOne wrote:How hard can it be to tell two drivers they have one new wing each, if you f*ck it up you´ll get the old wing.andrewf1 wrote: - one of the reasons why the new front wing didn't end up being used is because they only had 1 for each driver. it was deemed wise to avoid a situation similar to what happened with Red Bull at Silverstone 2010
I don´t know, it just seems pretty straight forward to me.
Seems like the other bit made more sense and this was more in the process of creating news rather then reporting it.
Even with a wing failure, say Rosberg´s wing fails at top speed. You tell Hamilton the wing isn´t safe, here´s the old one.mikeerfol wrote:Well he doesn't have to screw up, one wing failure is enough...
My reasoning was that perhaps the new wing requires a different aerodynamic setup. So they set the car up for it, qualifies with it and then has a first corner incident and they need a wing change. Bam, right there the setup is compromised.SectorOne wrote:How hard can it be to tell two drivers they have one new wing each, if you f*ck it up you´ll get the old wing.andrewf1 wrote: - one of the reasons why the new front wing didn't end up being used is because they only had 1 for each driver. it was deemed wise to avoid a situation similar to what happened with Red Bull at Silverstone 2010
I don´t know, it just seems pretty straight forward to me.
But that´s not the point though. The issue supposedly was the Silverstone 2010 incident in which Vettel´s wing broke and they took Webber´s wing and gave it to Vettel.NewtonMeter wrote:My reasoning was that perhaps the new wing requires a different aerodynamic setup. So they set the car up for it, qualifies with it and then has a first corner incident and they need a wing change. Bam, right there the setup is compromised.
If the previous wing still worked well and they saw that they still have the legs on the rest of the field, why risk it?
I don't know if this was their reasoning though. It just made sense to me from a risk/reward perspective.
Well spotted - my mistake.el-Magico wrote:Water atoms?SectorOne wrote:Or the air is stopping the metal atoms from moving around too much which in turn stops the water atoms from moving around.
I know a water molecule, or hydrogen & oxygen atoms...