As for overtaking, "more exciting races" etc., the following is interesting:
http://cliptheapex.com/overtaking/
Note how overtaking was rare in the refuelling days.
You can´t be more wrong, Lewis is my second favourite after Alonso. Well, and Ricciardo, not sure about the order to be sincere, but you can be sure I don´t dislike Hamilton, at least while he´s in the carNathanOlder wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 18:30No moto gp rider has over 100kg fuel your point being.
Fact is the same thing would happen in motogp if they had tyre changes. The slower bikes could set a fastest lap. So yes I am serious.
Are you serious? Please let me know of all the racing series where someone riding or driving the 4th/5th best car/bike would be unable to set a fastest lap with a new set of tyres at the end of a race with no refuelling. As your suggesting F1 is the only one ?
I'd have a good guess that most people who have a problem with F1 , dislike the number 44
That question should go to moderators, I don´t make the rules.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 18:31So people are only allowed to post on this thread if they agree with you?Andres125sx wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 17:34
And I really get annoyed with people like you obsessed with posting on threads he don´t like.... posting on threads you don´t like to provoke people participating in that thread can be seen as trolling Phil
If you disagree it´s fine. But it´s also fine if I think something need to be changed and start a thread to share my point of view. If you don´t like it, do not click, it is this easy
That had lesser cars but even with new tires couldn't catch him without burning up their nice shiny new tires.. SO if he was slow, what does it say about the other 19 fools on the grid ?
Thanks for posting this.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 18:32As for overtaking, "more exciting races" etc., the following is interesting:
http://cliptheapex.com/overtaking/
Note how overtaking was rare in the refuelling days.
The difference between Formula 2's pole and fastest lap at the British GP was around 4.5 seconds, for F1 it was 4.8, and that's not even considering that F2 doesn't need to babisit their engines as much.Andres125sx wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 08:49Exactly
So you think now that magically means a 11-12 seconds slower laptimes for same car and same driver? Take a timer and count to 12 please, I think you´re understimating what 12 seconds are for same car and same driver. Difference between F1 and GP2 pole times are not that big....DiogoBrand wrote: ↑18 Sep 2018, 20:17Drivers don't make a difference? What about the gap from Lewis to Bottas, from Vettel to Kimi, from Hamilton to Vettel in what we assume are equal cars?
They are definitely not cruising around, the difference is easy to explain: No qualifying mode, 100Kg of added fuel, tyres that must last over a longer distance than only one lap and there you have it.
You think McLaren is fast enough to make the fastest lap in the race at the last third of the race?
You think Magnussen did the fastest lap in the race because he was the fastest car? He really was 1 second faster to Hamilton and 2.8 seconds faster to Vettel?
https://www.formula1.com/en/results.htm ... -laps.html
I know, but you keep ignoring even Alonso set a fastest lap in the race, and he´s not the 4th-5th car, but the 6th-7thNathanOlder wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 23:30@Andres125s
My original point was all about KMag setting the fastest lap, and I was pointing out that MOST forms of motorsport can do exactly what happened , a slower guy being the fastest because he changed tyres much later than everyone else. You ignore the point I was making and go off with a different question.
Sorry but it´s funny you accuse me of not understanding the point, when it´s you who don´t understand the point.NathanOlder wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 23:301 thing I forgot to mention earlier was you saying
" Hamilton fast lap in race was 107,2% his pole lap, he wouldn´t qualify for the race with that lap "
that last smily face, is you completely, I mean Hamilton's fastest lap was a 1.4 and you say it wouldn't have qualified for the race ? Do you understand how F1 qualifying works ? you spout out all this rubbish making arguments on trash, when you dont even get your facts right and make yourself seem a little foolish.
Even Hamilton's last lap of the race (not pushing at all) was enought to qualify for the race, Lap 14 & 15 for instance, on heavy fuel was enough to qualify, later in the race he was well in to the 1.43's again, enought to qualify.
So my message to you is , dont do this too often, you may cause some serious damage.
Except with that conditions you´re describing it was 11-12 seconds, not 6, 6 was for the fastest lap with empty tank.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑20 Sep 2018, 03:38The difference between Formula 2's pole and fastest lap at the British GP was around 4.5 seconds, for F1 it was 4.8, and that's not even considering that F2 doesn't need to babisit their engines as much.Andres125sx wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 08:49Exactly
So you think now that magically means a 11-12 seconds slower laptimes for same car and same driver? Take a timer and count to 12 please, I think you´re understimating what 12 seconds are for same car and same driver. Difference between F1 and GP2 pole times are not that big....DiogoBrand wrote: ↑18 Sep 2018, 20:17Drivers don't make a difference? What about the gap from Lewis to Bottas, from Vettel to Kimi, from Hamilton to Vettel in what we assume are equal cars?
They are definitely not cruising around, the difference is easy to explain: No qualifying mode, 100Kg of added fuel, tyres that must last over a longer distance than only one lap and there you have it.
You think McLaren is fast enough to make the fastest lap in the race at the last third of the race?
You think Magnussen did the fastest lap in the race because he was the fastest car? He really was 1 second faster to Hamilton and 2.8 seconds faster to Vettel?
https://www.formula1.com/en/results.htm ... -laps.html
When you take a car and add 13% weight in the form of fuel, need to make their tyres last for a whole stint, their engine isn't in one-lap-mode and needs to last for around 7 races, all of that on a circuit where cornering and acceleration matter as much as in Singapore, 6 seconds aren't all that much.
I like a good argument, but come on, you're clouding the issue, and you know you are. There is more than one issue at play. The OWG solved the problem with the overtakes, so there is only 1 year of data to draw from, i.e. 2009.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Sep 2018, 18:32As for overtaking, "more exciting races" etc., the following is interesting:
http://cliptheapex.com/overtaking/
Note how overtaking was rare in the refuelling days.