Yes, it is in the same locked cupboard as the Senna 1994 Imola onboard.nacho wrote:I wonder if they have onboard footage
Him backing off from 200 clicks to 135 in a corner designed for well over that, flicking down two gears then decided to turn right straight into a wall making no efforts to stay on track.Moose wrote:Seriously, what doesn't make sense about that (stated by both McLaren and Alonso, and backed up by Vettel's comments) story?
(speed was 135kph, and he did turn right into the wall)"The speed was slow - maybe 150kph. Then he turned right into the wall. It looked strange," the German said.
Hmm. So you can see the car driving slow then suddenly turn right and now all of a sudden you can´t see how the accident started?"I was right behind but I didn't really see. I was a bit too late so I couldn't see how the accident started, I only saw the last bit where he hit the wall. But what happened before I don't know, I cannot judge."
McLaren said there was no loss of downforce....Moose wrote:[...], became light on downforce, [...]
That he downshifted, according to McLaren. (You didn't mention this, btw., so, in which phase of the accident did he downshift?)Moose wrote:[...] [...]Seriously, what doesn't make sense about that (stated by both McLaren and Alonso, and backed up by Vettel's comments) story?
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
a good article, but the author's deductions are not entirely to followThunders wrote:Andrew Benson's Article that was mentioned by SectorOne:(at least i hope it is that one)
http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/formula1/31732315
There might not be a loss of downforce, but running wide on the astroturf can give you a big loss of grip which could oversteer the car into the inside wall with possibly some help of a strong wind gust in such way that countersteering does not help right away or none at all to redirect the car and steering away from the wall. As a result to that the only other option he had was slowing down as much as possible, hence the hard braking and 2 downshifts in an unusual spot right before the impact.Abarth wrote:McLaren said there was no loss of downforce....Moose wrote:[...], became light on downforce, [...]
That he downshifted, according to McLaren. (You didn't mention this, btw., so, in which phase of the accident did he downshift?)Moose wrote:[...] [...]Seriously, what doesn't make sense about that (stated by both McLaren and Alonso, and backed up by Vettel's comments) story?
confusion reigned !Kiril Varbanov wrote:In order to capture your mood regarding the incident I have created a poll: http://www.f1technical.net/poll/index.php?dispid=291