I like these old school tracks. Less mickey mouse and more balls to the wall kind of thing.
I think Williams has a second chance to podium here. redbull will be strong as well.
They said austria.Harsha wrote:Im awaiting for Renault planned new engine upgrade and is this track where RBR said they will bring the big modifications at both front and rear or is it silverstone??
No, should be normal weather in the Alpes. As usual with a high probability of thunderstorms in the late afternoon. This is where the high probability of rain comes from, but this should not affect the race. Full days of rain are very unusual at this time.mikeerfol wrote:Is this the time of the year it rains a lot there? Google gives a week full of rain for Styria.
High kerbs as a solution? This is I'm afraid arguing with reality. Reality is every time they install high kerbs it's the same scenario: 1. Drivers drive over them 2. Drivers complain 3. They remove the high kerbs (Singapore, recently Bahrain I think). Now, these are the same drivers that are arbitrarily used against any inconvenient hot topic: tyres, not 100% pushing, engine sounds etc. The only difference is I think they all say it.Tim.Wright wrote:This attitude is why the tracks today are boring to watch. [...] Now, there are no drastic consequences of cutting corners and in fact Rosberg has even shown that if you do cut a corner which reduced the theat of a challenging car you are even allowed to slow down later in the lap when it suits you and give that time back at a point when you are no longer under immediate threat. In my opinion, track redesign and a rethink of the sporting regs would go a long way to improving the spectacle without touching the cars themselvesbeelsebob wrote:Said curbs will launch you in a crash though, so putting them around the outside edge of the track is not a great plan.basti313 wrote:There is only one way to solve this in a fair an equal way: Curbs that slow you down when you cut or go wide.
The track limits are just not judgeable and will always lead to inappropriate discussions. Beelsebob gave two nice examples, but there are a lot more like Alonso in Abu Dhabi....
basti313 wrote:Why? I do not think of curbs, that launch your car up into the air...just a small, ribbed curb with low grip that makes you run wide on the outside. Or these nice grass carpets, that have no grip at all, on the exit of the corner. On the inside nice, high curbs to avoid cutting. Not as bad as these, but high enough to slow you down: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3zQK_BF-0Jgbeelsebob wrote:Said curbs will launch you in a crash though, so putting them around the outside edge of the track is not a great plan.basti313 wrote:There is only one way to solve this in a fair an equal way: Curbs that slow you down when you cut or go wide.
The track limits are just not judgeable and will always lead to inappropriate discussions. Beelsebob gave two nice examples, but there are a lot more like Alonso in Abu Dhabi....
This rule is flawed in itselfmertol wrote:The rules clearly say that you can go out of track if you don't gain advantage. It is easy to determine whether advantage was gained and if it was they should penalize every single time.