From the aggregate time I would deduct a SWAG factor and a possible fan boost.Diesel wrote:Possible change is an aggregate time from two laps.... WHAT THE F$#@!?
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From the aggregate time I would deduct a SWAG factor and a possible fan boost.Diesel wrote:Possible change is an aggregate time from two laps.... WHAT THE F$#@!?
Good job Kimi, 100% agree.giantfan10 wrote:Kimi as usual is the voice of reason and got straight to the point .In reference to qualifying :
"There is so much politics and bullshit in F1 that it is crazy sometimes," he said. "People from the outside must look at us and think 'what stupid people, what are they doing?'.
The game is politics. What we're seeing is a power struggle between the FIA/FOM and the teams, particularly Mercedes and Ferrari. As is usual in F1, it's being played out in public and noone is looking good as a result.OneAlex wrote:I'm trying to decide if Bernie and Todt are being serious or just playing a game now.
3 tenths and Ricciardo would have kicked him out. He would not have been a able to try another lap.Phil wrote: Imagine if Hamilton had lost so much time on his excursion on his first lap in Q3 that he would have been the first car to be eliminated. Then he'd had started 8th instead of pole = exciting race prospects. This is precisely what this new qualifying aims to provoke.
I think this is the point on which many posters here are wrong. With Saturday everything was ok, or whatever was not ok could have been fixed with more tires. They wanted to mix up the grid for Sunday, nothing else.Manoah2u wrote:the promotors, lets call them the combination of the sponsors and the tracks for the race venues, saw need for a change for the saturday format.
Shameless self promotion here, but I really believe this system would work. It reuses the 2015 format (which we all agree wasn't actually broken) with just a minor tweak on allowed tyre compounds (which in itself would already be accommodated by the 3 compound rule brought in this year which seems to be well received). It would definitely mix up the grid in my opinion.GlenDownUnder wrote:Hi everyone.
This topic has compelled me to register after several years of casual browsing!
I understand the desire for mixed up grids because it never fails to provide excitement.
Here's my proposal for an alternative quali format. Feel free to critique.
Since for this season we already have 3 dry weather compounds selected for each race weekend this offers us the following possibility:
Retain the 2015 qualification framework of 3 sessions where the slowest drivers are eliminated at the end of each session but add the following restrictions:
In Q1 only the softest compound may be used.
In Q2 only the "middle" compound may be used.
In Q3 only the hardest compound may be used.
Eliminated drivers retain their fastest lap times.
Drivers that qualify for the next phase have their times deleted.
At the end of Q3 the grid is ordered by the fastest overall times.
Because of the varying time differences between the tyre compounds chosen for a particular track, the potential is there for drivers eliminated in Q1 or Q2 to have a better lap time than those achieved by those in the latter stages of qualifying.
Thoughts?
Too much disincentive to advance to the next round.GlenDownUnder wrote:Shameless self promotion here, but I really believe this system would work. It reuses the 2015 format (which we all agree wasn't actually broken) with just a minor tweak on allowed tyre compounds (which in itself would already be accommodated by the 3 compound rule brought in this year which seems to be well received). It would definitely mix up the grid in my opinion.GlenDownUnder wrote:Hi everyone.
This topic has compelled me to register after several years of casual browsing!
I understand the desire for mixed up grids because it never fails to provide excitement.
Here's my proposal for an alternative quali format. Feel free to critique.
Since for this season we already have 3 dry weather compounds selected for each race weekend this offers us the following possibility:
Retain the 2015 qualification framework of 3 sessions where the slowest drivers are eliminated at the end of each session but add the following restrictions:
In Q1 only the softest compound may be used.
In Q2 only the "middle" compound may be used.
In Q3 only the hardest compound may be used.
Eliminated drivers retain their fastest lap times.
Drivers that qualify for the next phase have their times deleted.
At the end of Q3 the grid is ordered by the fastest overall times.
Because of the varying time differences between the tyre compounds chosen for a particular track, the potential is there for drivers eliminated in Q1 or Q2 to have a better lap time than those achieved by those in the latter stages of qualifying.
Thoughts?
Think about it, its effectively the equivalent of the race day undercut on steroids for quali..