do you have a source for that? just curious.
So whats the conclusion there then....FOM just typed in some random numbers in a computer to make it up, before showing it to the tv audiences?
Source was this article, says that the FOM probably measured the time.
Well you you have the rules and then the way they get enforced, this particular one with a system that has a certain tolerance - all competitors agreed to that solution and it has been in place for 20 years.Treble wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 21:27"there is an error of margin for the system". Exactly. And is this "tolerance" included in the FIA rules?
Any forward movement before the lights go out is not legal as is moving when the start signal is given (as stated by the FIA International Sporting Regulation Art. 8.6.1.b & c)
So apparently there is this so called "tolerance" that only FIA knows. No trace of it in the rules. Only FIA knows.fiohaa wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 22:31http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/130639
So it WAS a judgement call - and they will never reveal the data behind it either.
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/130639
I personally feel Bottas did a PlayStation start, but I feel it was completely fair. He gambled by pre-empting and it worked out. Sebastian is stirring an unnecessary pot. He congratulated him and says it was fair but still doesn't 'buy' the start. Found it quite sour grapes!Phil wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 21:05Absolutely, hence the necessity to investigate and punish where appropriate.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:52Isn't that what every F1 driver is supposed to do?Phil wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:40
Rules are rules? I love the fact Bottas won, but if it was a jump start, it should be properly investigated, or else you will have drivers like Vettel who get every edge they can exploiting these very things next race. E.g.: slowly slipping the clutch just moments before the lights go out. Rules are rules for a reason and they should be consistent across the board, no matter who is in focus.
Ps: Hamilton on a slide? How so? I find that quite a surprising statement considering the weekend he had. If you are referring to his Q3 lap, well, it wasnt exactly easy on a car set up for SS and not "in the sweet spot"?
Ricciardo was also reporting jump start on the radio, it just wasn't broadcasted. Now go and hate him equally.
Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 22:51I personally feel Bottas did a PlayStation start, but I feel it was completely fair. He gambled by pre-empting and it worked out. Sebastian is stirring an unnecessary pot. He congratulated him and says it was fair but still doesn't 'buy' the start. Found it quite sour grapes!Phil wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 21:05Absolutely, hence the necessity to investigate and punish where appropriate.
Ps: Hamilton on a slide? How so? I find that quite a surprising statement considering the weekend he had. If you are referring to his Q3 lap, well, it wasnt exactly easy on a car set up for SS and not "in the sweet spot"?
Hamilton on the slide? I think Hamilton doesn't turn up on some weekends. He had a heartbreak in Malaysia last year and he was somewhere else in Suzuka the week after.
He had another heartbreak at Baku and he was quite anonymous today. I've seen Lewis have these 'penalties' or poor quail's before but he immediately responds on race day.
I think it was Martin Brundle who said on Sky that his mindset isn't as 'on point' as it used to be.. or something along those lines!
Just look at LH in Canada and compare his body language all weekend here. It's just an observation guys, let's not treat my opinion as 'a fact' I'm trying to state.
Only one of them was railing about it still in the post race interviews. The guy has a hard time letting things go when they don't "go" his way. You can overlook it all you want.
I think every pilot can call penalty via radio and discuss about it all the time. Hamilton has talked via radio about the drive trough penalty inflicted to Vettel in Baku race, i don't see where is the problem. Don't conflate the facts, we hold the community to a higher standard here. Some through struggle to meet those standards. Don't be one of those some.TAG wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 23:21Only one of them was railing about it still in the post race interviews. The guy has a hard time letting things go when they don't "go" his way. You can overlook it all you want.
The "old" Hamilton would have probably ended in the gravel with Ricciardo. And we would probably all call him stupid for spilling good points.Wass85 wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 21:25No he's factoring in Hamilton only doing enough for 3rd on the grid when he has the car to get pole. In the races nowadays he's super cautious which costs him potential podiums when there's the opportunity. He's been driving like this for a couple of seasons now.TAG wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 21:08Are you factoring in his replaced transmission and subsequent grid penalty on the slide? It's a long season, don't worry he'll pull it out with plenty points to spare, especially now that Ferrari is beginning to falter on the development front, Vettel will feel the effects of grid penalties soon enough, he'll be sliding as well.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑09 Jul 2017, 20:59In my opinion, Austria was another exclamation mark to what I've believed in since 2016, which is Lewis is on the slide. His 'off' weekends are getting more and more frequent while he retains his usual untouchable brilliance on others.