Can't agree more. We can predict the strategies in Canada already if not something strange will happen. And the gap to the rest of field is big enough to allow different tactics and strategies.SiLo wrote:I can understand why Mercedes do it, but I don't think either driver will get behind that method. If they are going to battle each other, let each side of the garage have a tactician and let them decide their own strategies. It would make the racing much more fun to watch if we didn't know what the other driver was going to do.
Not this again 1. He won couple of times aided by the rule you now complain about - considerably better strategy for a leading driver, I didn't hear many complaints then. Is current awareness and complaining related to a non-story Monaco? After this race interest in free racing between Merc drivers is suddenly sky-rocketing, especially pitstop timing.mika vs michael wrote:Can anyone please inform me when that rule about leading driver pitting first was introduced? Lewis has beaten Nico 4 straight times and it would have been five out of 6 races...so if I were Lewis I would enter the pits whenever I wanted. Sorry but I don't buy that policy of leading driver. If Ferrari and Redbull had equally fast cars to Merc, there would be no leading driver picking anything...it would be a battle between Vettel, Alonso and Hamilton...Mercedes has the luxury to race on a level of it own and impose such things. but it may not last more than a year.
I don't see how that would work as Lewis would have had to make up more than 1 second. Maybe it's easier to think of it as distance. I'll make a crude calculation, but you'll get the idea:Shaddock wrote:I've been having a think about the undercut and it might of worked.
When Lewis and Nico arrived at the pit entrance on the lap of the crash there was very little gap between them, lets say 1 second. Lewis tells the pits he ran over some of Sutil's front wing and he's think he's got a puncture and dives into the pits.
Lets add 25 seconds for the pit stop to the original 1s gap to Nico bringing it to 26s on the road. With Nico having to make a pit stop the actual gap to make up during the undercut is only 1 second. The longer Lewis can stay out of the without the SC coming out the better, but when it does then all cars are restricted to I think a 140% lap time delta. The SC came our shortly after Lewis would have exited the pits, but this would not necessarily have made much difference as the cars would then all be traveling at the same speed back to the pits and the relative gaps would have been maintained. (assuming no intentional blocking)
I think there are two ways in which Lewis could have made the 1 second up; (I'm going to assume he didn't close all of the 1s gap before the SC as there wasn't long enough) One is on the main straight where sector 3 ends and sector 1 starts. Do the first part of sector one flat out, past the pit exit (well below the 140% lap target) then back right off as you head up the hill to bring your sector average back up to 140% but gaining track position in the process.
The other way I see it happening is that the pit lane was going to the get busy, and it would only take a car coming past Nico in his box when he comes off the jacks to loose the 1s advantage.
Do you take a safe second place or do you gamble - Lewis wanted to throw the dice.
i thought they catched up immediately with the safety car yes, guess i remembered wrongRodzilla wrote:no way Rosberg could grow the gap for a full pitstop? thats an interesting and unexpected theory lolManoah2u wrote:+2.
and a little bit more.....are we argueing over 25 secs? seriously? IF Hamilton would have pitted, straight away, before safety car - not delving into any 'fair play' stuff -, then he would have pitted before rosberg did. rosberg still had to pit,- that would have resulted an easy overtake because there is no way rosberg could grow enough of a gap for a full pitstop without losing position.
Whether Rosberg would have pitted during the SC period, or afterwards is irrelevant. If hamilton sneaked into the pits, he would have ended up close enough behind rosberg (the cars in front from p5 would still have to pit, too) that he would have overtaken him = equal to winning
no of course he wouldnt need to grow a gap he would have one already, think about it, you are missing some knowledge either about how F1 works in general or about this situation, maybe that you think the safety car immediately picked up rosberg?
the relative gaps would not be maintained, its a 26s full speed gap, the physical gap will stay the same but the time gap increases when you slow downShaddock wrote:I've been having a think about the undercut and it might of worked.
When Lewis and Nico arrived at the pit entrance on the lap of the crash there was very little gap between them, lets say 1 second. Lewis tells the pits he ran over some of Sutil's front wing and he's think he's got a puncture and dives into the pits.
Lets add 25 seconds for the pit stop to the original 1s gap to Nico bringing it to 26s on the road. With Nico having to make a pit stop the actual gap to make up during the undercut is only 1 second. The longer Lewis can stay out of the without the SC coming out the better, but when it does then all cars are restricted to I think a 140% lap time delta. The SC came our shortly after Lewis would have exited the pits, but this would not necessarily have made much difference as the cars would then all be traveling at the same speed back to the pits and the relative gaps would have been maintained. (assuming no intentional blocking)
I think there are two ways in which Lewis could have made the 1 second up; (I'm going to assume he didn't close all of the 1s gap before the SC as there wasn't long enough) One is on the main straight where sector 3 ends and sector 1 starts. Do the first part of sector one flat out, past the pit exit (well below the 140% lap target) then back right off as you head up the hill to bring your sector average back up to 140% but gaining track position in the process.
The other way I see it happening is that the pit lane was going to the get busy, and it would only take a car coming past Nico in his box when he comes off the jacks to loose the 1s advantage.
Do you take a safe second place or do you gamble - Lewis wanted to throw the dice.
the lead driver strategy is pretty much field wide including ferrari unless there is a clear 1-2 driver situationmika vs michael wrote:Can anyone please inform me when that rule about leading driver pitting first was introduced? Lewis has beaten Nico 4 straight times and it would have been five out of 6 races...so if I were Lewis I would enter the pits whenever I wanted. Sorry but I don't buy that policy of leading driver. If Ferrari and Redbull had equally fast cars to Merc, there would be no leading driver picking anything...it would be a battle between Vettel, Alonso and Hamilton...Mercedes has the luxury to race on a level of it own and impose such things. but it may not last more than a year.
You overlooked one small detail: The stop for Lewis would add 25 seconds indeed, but when driving to safety car delta the stop for Nico would only be an 18 second loss (140% time -> 25 / 1.4 = 17.8 ) because of the lower speed driven on track. So Lewis would have to make up 7 seconds due to safety car delta AND the 1 second that he was behind anyway. So: no, it would not have worked.Shaddock wrote:I've been having a think about the undercut and it might of worked.
[..]Lets add 25 seconds for the pit stop to the original 1s gap to Nico bringing it to 26s on the road. With Nico having to make a pit stop the actual gap to make up during the undercut is only 1 second.
It's a very common convention, simple and effective at avoiding arguments ... unless you're in a team with team orders (Alonso is faster than you , or Multi 21).mika vs michael wrote:Can anyone please inform me when that rule about leading driver pitting first was introduced?
He said straight after the race he was as much to blame as his team.... This rant is almost as bad as those Merc favour Rosberg conspiracy's.Rodzilla wrote:bump
lol so now its revealed how hamilton was the one who argued for the pitstop at monaco the team told him to stay out, he didnt offer this information after the race and let the team take the blame
what an idiot he is, he should shut up and let the team do the thinking
he should have explained after the race that he is stupid and take not equal blame but most or all of it, before the pitstop he said that a decision to stay out was dumb because the others would be on fresh tyres and he would have to try to fight them off, so then he makes the stop and is on fresh tyres but behind in 3rd and his message to his team was "we have lost this race"SilverArrow10 wrote:He said straight after the race he was as much to blame as his team.... This rant is almost as bad as those Merc favour Rosberg conspiracy's.Rodzilla wrote:bump
lol so now its revealed how hamilton was the one who argued for the pitstop at monaco the team told him to stay out, he didnt offer this information after the race and let the team take the blame
what an idiot he is, he should shut up and let the team do the thinking