Pit boards were the best tools available to them at the time. The FIA's recent clarification is like asking the drivers of yore to forsake pit boards for smoke signals. It's absolutely absurd, but it's completely in line with the sport's current quest to dumb things down because its primary audience is no longer capable of critical thought. (To be fair, the same could also probably be said about the two main contenders for the Championship this year.)strad wrote:[...]
For many of those questions posed that you don't think has to do with driver coaching, thing like when to pit etc.. that can still be handled the old fashioned way... A Pit Board.
How oh how did Mario or Fangio, or Hill D., G., or P. ,,, and all those others get by???
That would make sense if image was the reason (or one of the reasons) but with one problem. What about messages close together: Kimi is faster than you, lift and coast turn 12, Kimi is faster than you? It would be too much of a hassle to edit it out, plus there would be questions about missing parts. So how many people will FIA need to listen to team radio and judge? I remember when Hamilton overtook safety car (2010?) they ignored it and gave penalty too late that didn't mean anything. The argument for a delay AFAIR was that they didn't have enough personnel to monitor every driver separately.Cold Fussion wrote:This is an entirely self created problem by FOM constant broadcasting such team radio messages. Given that FOM are entirely in control of almost all the races, the solution is as simple as it gets, don't broadcast messages that give a bad outside perception. If it is to be banned, it's completely un-policable.
They are currently broadcasting team radio that is sometimes a few laps old to spice things up and edit replays (or in other words: manipulate the world feed) by adding team members' reactions to totally different situations and you think someone might be concerned about incomplete messages that are cut?iotar__ wrote:What about messages close together: Kimi is faster than you, lift and coast turn 12, Kimi is faster than you? It would be too much of a hassle to edit it out, plus there would be questions about missing parts.
Why slow "top teams"? As far as I can read it from the team radio transcripts the Merc engine is incredibly difficult to set up. They are changing engine modes all the time and are allowing and disallowing the overtake button all the time. The only profit for Williams and McLaren would be that Merc can not forbid them anymore to use Overtake when Ham is near...Just_a_fan wrote:Just another rule change asked for by slow "top teams" in order to try to slow down the fastest team of the season.
Pointless and makes F1 look even more out of touch.
Where did you find this fact?basti313 wrote:The only profit for Williams and McLaren would be that Merc can not forbid them anymore to use Overtake when Ham is near...
The teams asked for the change!basti313 wrote:
I do not think any of the teams want this rule change. Will make the situation harder for everyone.
In Austria, the FIA deleted one of Alonso's Q1 times, and more importantly, Hamilton's Q3 time.MOWOG wrote:A rule that is ambiguous, as this one is, will inevitably be enforced arbitrarily and capriciously. We have already seen how a perfectly clear rule like 4 tires off the racing surface is only applied to lower teams and never against Ferrari, Red Bull, Mercades or McLaren.
By failing to enforce the "4 off" rule, the FIA has made it impossible to enforce this new regulation. I loathe rules that serve only to give lawyers something new to do.
The Motorsport magazine wrote about it. Also Alex Wurz, who is at Williams, was talking about the "overtake button problem" in ORF1 during the race.SectorOne wrote:Where did you find this fact?basti313 wrote:The only profit for Williams and McLaren would be that Merc can not forbid them anymore to use Overtake when Ham is near...
Of course not. But the "Overtake on-off" for Massa was quite strange to me. We do not need to talk about the controversy, lets stick to that it has to be turned on and off. How can a Merc driver know when to use it?SectorOne wrote:Looking at the Merc, or Hamilton in particular he did not have full charge even on lap 4 so i can´t see how Massa can run around with the overtake button every single lap.
Did they? I do not see that, especially not how it turned out now.Just_a_fan wrote:The teams asked for the change!basti313 wrote:
I do not think any of the teams want this rule change. Will make the situation harder for everyone.
I'm guessing that the overtake is using the electric motors in a non sustainable area of high current. It gives you a high torque but it heats up the motor coils.basti313 wrote: Of course not. But the "Overtake on-off" for Massa was quite strange to me. We do not need to talk about the controversy, lets stick to that it has to be turned on and off. How can a Merc driver know when to use it?