Just_a_fan wrote:theblackangus wrote:
I have played video games with more control's being used far more actively than an F1 car. Example ARMA III has literally a hundred + controls/options, and before that Tribes 1/2 I used around 136 keys/combinations with roughly 50-75 of those used multiple times per match.
It just doesn't seem like a top level driver should have a hard time with this at all.
Were you sat in a box at 35-45 degC being subjected to vibration and high g loads? Were you sat behind a wall of spray so you couldn't see? Were you physically wheel to wheel with someone at 200mph? Did a mistake risk injury or worse? When you were playing your game and the computer suddenly decided to reboot did you just spill your soda in frustration or did you carry on at 180mph towards that tight right hander whilst simultaneously trying to brake, steer, defend/overtake, and sort the computer problem? Take Kimi's recent issue - he had to remember that the action required for that one issue was P4. P4 was 12 clicks on one button followed by 4 clicks on another button. So he'd have had know what the issue was, then what solutions might work, then remember a set of button pushes then carry them out, without losing count, all whilst driving a vibrating machine that will put him in the barriers if he takes his mind off it. Oh, and he has to race in close proximity with others at high speed at the same time.
Really, comparing video games to real situations is the sort of thing one expects from a ten year old.
Your simply putting words in my mouth and over blowing the issue.
The key point is that, in my opinion, mentally the driver should not have a problem instructing the car and a few hundred settings isn't asking too much. Sure there are other challenges to driving a car on a track, (which I have done, so indeed do understand those challenges, including the high heat in a box, with more than my comfort in g-loads, granted my suspension isn't nearly as stiff as an F1 car) but that is what they signed up for and are arguable the best in the world and want to prove that.
You also have to take into account that the driver isn't constantly fiddling with everything, the use of the these few hundred settings/controls isn't that frequent and I doubt they are using 100 different settings in a race.
Maybe a different point of view - ever been in a jet fighter cockpit? Those have way more buttons/controls and the pilot there is at least in the same situation as an F1 pilot, usually more dangerous as if they crash they just die. I would hope our best drivers have the same or better mental capacity as a fighter pilot!
Whats that good old saying... any man can use a tool, a good man can use a tool for two purposes, the man that can use a tool for 3 purposes... hes the one I want working for me.
I'm not too worked up either way. At the end of the day they all have the same rules, sometimes those favor different people/skill sets.
Funny for someone calling names to accuse someone else of being a 10 year old. Next time find the good not the bad in someone