Why this nonsense about "dangerous" here? The rule is clear, he impeded where it is not allowed and got a penalty for it. Nothing to discuss. No one in F1 talks about "dangerous".Unc1eM0nty wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 10:15Dangerous...... deserved yes but dangerous ?
We was driving in the pit late at 40kph instead of 50kph, how is that dangerous ?
Usually they do not have DRS when they press the button slightly too early. Ros had this problem several times...
Ham having a chance to catch and overtake Vet is something I still do not see. The tire advantage was maybe a second to 1.5 sec. Clearly not enough to catch Vet and miles away from overtaking. Some claim Ham had much more pace then Bot in the second stint...still he could not overtake.djos wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 08:36I'm not a Lewis fanboy but I doubt he'd have had much trouble considering he was 1.8 seconds a lap faster. Mercedes moved Bottas out of the way because they thought Lewis still had a chance to catch Seb and win the race. Any delay to Bottas being passed jeopardized this.Anthropolyte wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 08:18And yet Lewis couldn't get past him on his own merit. Had to rely on team orders to get past a slower car. Pretty poor, don't you think?
Here we go again, 'I'm not a fanboy' doesn't add any weight to your arguments:basti313 wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 11:31Ham having a chance to catch and overtake Vet is something I still do not see. The tire advantage was maybe a second to 1.5 sec. Clearly not enough to catch Vet and miles away from overtaking. Some claim Ham had much more pace then Bot in the second stint...still he could not overtake.djos wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 08:36I'm not a Lewis fanboy but I doubt he'd have had much trouble considering he was 1.8 seconds a lap faster. Mercedes moved Bottas out of the way because they thought Lewis still had a chance to catch Seb and win the race. Any delay to Bottas being passed jeopardized this.Anthropolyte wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 08:18
And yet Lewis couldn't get past him on his own merit. Had to rely on team orders to get past a slower car. Pretty poor, don't you think?
Merc used the Q mode on their engine to squeeze another half second out of it to catch Bot. One could clearly see, that Ham had most advantage in S1 where the engine counts, not in S2 where the newer tires compared to Vet and Bot.
For me this was a clear teamorder move with having the driver championship in mind. Nothing else.
You clearly missed the past where Lewis offered to give the place back if he wasn't able to reel in Seb, which he was able to do.
Here we go again, 'I'm not a fanboy' doesn't add any weight to your arguments:
Have you seen the second formula2 race? That guy closed down a 31 second gap in 12 laps to win the race.When the tires go down they go down quite steeply. If Vettel would have hit the cliff Hamilton would have had a chance.basti313 wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 11:31Ham having a chance to catch and overtake Vet is something I still do not see. The tire advantage was maybe a second to 1.5 sec. Clearly not enough to catch Vet and miles away from overtaking. Some claim Ham had much more pace then Bot in the second stint...still he could not overtake.djos wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 08:36I'm not a Lewis fanboy but I doubt he'd have had much trouble considering he was 1.8 seconds a lap faster. Mercedes moved Bottas out of the way because they thought Lewis still had a chance to catch Seb and win the race. Any delay to Bottas being passed jeopardized this.Anthropolyte wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 08:18
And yet Lewis couldn't get past him on his own merit. Had to rely on team orders to get past a slower car. Pretty poor, don't you think?
Merc used the Q mode on their engine to squeeze another half second out of it to catch Bot. One could clearly see, that Ham had most advantage in S1 where the engine counts, not in S2 where the newer tires compared to Vet and Bot.
For me this was a clear teamorder move with having the driver championship in mind. Nothing else.
- No, situation were identical when it comes to probabilities, closer or not closer the chance wasn't there, it's binary zero and one. It's just excuses for cheating team orders and fake championship. Same results too, the rest is pointless theory instead of facts.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 11:17If we are comparing these two situations (and we should) I think we should at least get the facts right...Phil wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 10:22They did. But that was at off chance. Vet didn't stand a chance in China, not with the gap. ...Hammerfist wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 05:39They did hesitate to shaft Kimi in China though, and that cost Vettel a chance at challenging Hamilton. ...
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http://i65.tinypic.com/9amedk.jpg
HAM was closer to VET yesterday (after the SC went in) than VET was to him in China at the same time. However, in China both Ferrari drivers were on the same tyres (if I'm not mistaken), it was evident that Kimi can't overtake Dani and it was evident that Seb was faster. After the gap was 5s to Hamilton, Ferrari really had to give Kimi the order and race could have been on from that point. They didn't and that was race for first place over. Later Seb overtook Kimi and Dani and maintained the gap to Lewis. In the final stint he caught him up a bit, but Hamilton was managing his race just as Seb was yesterday.
And let's not kid ourselves with the fact that Lewis was catching Seb after Bottas let him trough. Seb was on SS tyres for 22-23 laps, just as much as he was on S later. By the time Lewis got within 6s off Vettel, Vettel should have been in the pits if it weren't for Dani, who they had to get clear off in their out-lap window and not risk getting stuck behind him.
My point is (and I sense it got lost a bit ) - Merc were right to give Hamilton the place and try to win this race, but Ferrari in China had an even better reason to do so, in my view. They didn't and it could cost them in November...
Because Bottas couldn't keep up, it's not like the red bull guys who've actually kept pace with the sister car and then handed the place back when they couldn't capitalise on it.
The F2 is running completely different tires this year. There is simply no cliff on the F1 tires this year.Edax wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 12:11Have you seen the second formula2 race? That guy closed down a 31 second gap in 12 laps to win the race.When the tires go down they go down quite steeply. If Vettel would have hit the cliff Hamilton would have had a chance.basti313 wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 11:31Ham having a chance to catch and overtake Vet is something I still do not see. The tire advantage was maybe a second to 1.5 sec. Clearly not enough to catch Vet and miles away from overtaking. Some claim Ham had much more pace then Bot in the second stint...still he could not overtake.djos wrote: ↑17 Apr 2017, 08:36
I'm not a Lewis fanboy but I doubt he'd have had much trouble considering he was 1.8 seconds a lap faster. Mercedes moved Bottas out of the way because they thought Lewis still had a chance to catch Seb and win the race. Any delay to Bottas being passed jeopardized this.
Merc used the Q mode on their engine to squeeze another half second out of it to catch Bot. One could clearly see, that Ham had most advantage in S1 where the engine counts, not in S2 where the newer tires compared to Vet and Bot.
For me this was a clear teamorder move with having the driver championship in mind. Nothing else.
You do not have to buy it. It was quite clear, that the wing was closed. I guess they just do not talk about it, because it was the usual "pressed the button too early" problem. DRS was working before and after this lap. No repair in parc fermé....so no mechanical defect.