If you tune your eyes a bit to see other colours and not just red you'll see Lewis right there in front of him running even wider at Pouchon. Although he left the area earlier.Rob W wrote:Actually... a couple of corners after this pass Kimi drove completely off the track around the runoff area and came back onto the track really close to Hamilton. The commentator even said in those conditions the run-off sometimes gave more grip..
Anyway, that move allowed Kimi to be right with Hamilton when they encountered the Williams just before the lead swapped again and then Kimi crashed.
If Kimi had held that lead he would have gained a clear advantage from driving off the track.
R
I wrote:What happened to Heiki?
Thanks. I watched the race. I was wondering about the reason of retirement.axle wrote:Heikki's race,
Poor start, swamped and squeezed by the midfield...ended up 13th after the first couple of corners.
Then later, when going for 6th (absolutely stormed up from 13th) he cocked it all up and tripped up on Webber (indecisive overtake attempt at the bus-stop). He was given a drive through for that...and never properly recovered, certainly not into the points..
I did say that LH left the runoff area earlier, but that's because he left the track earlier too, so he was able to return before the big curb thing began. Kimi had to stay on the other side of the curb to rejoin when the curb ended. He gained nothing there as the tarmac is always more wet off the racing line, let alone the runoff areas. The line off the track didn't help approaching the next corner either. He only passed Lewis because LH went off the track later and almost stopped to keep the car from spinning. You can see that on the second picture.boci wrote:Yes but Lewis got back on the road as soon as possibly while Kimi accelerated in the run off area and came back on the track only when the run off area ended.
Assume there were walls right where the white lines are. Can you imagine LH recovering so quickly after the bad attempt and then be in position to overtake KR in turn 1?WhiteBlue wrote:I have yet to hear a reasoning for the penalty for Hamilton.
I'm afraid I don't understand your point. The situation was simple and clear. there wasn't space at bus stop and Hamilton cut the corner off track.modbaraban wrote:Assume there were walls right where the white lines are. Can you imagine LH recovering so quickly after the bad attempt and then be in position to overtake KR in turn 1?WhiteBlue wrote:I have yet to hear a reasoning for the penalty for Hamilton.
Not according to Brundle who said in these conditions the runn-off aread often have more grip. It allowed Kimi to re-enter the race track at full speed which he would otherwise had not been able to had he stayed on the track. This alone allowed him to stay right on Hamilton's ass. This would seem to fall within the definition of 'making a gain' according to the way it has been interpreted before.modbaraban wrote:he gained nothing there as the tarmac is always more wet off the racing line, let alone the runoff areas. The line off the track didn't help approaching the next corner either...
He didn't. That's my point. After an unsuccessful overtaking attempt he would be several seconds behind unless cutting the corner. The advantage wasn't really given away. Let alone the naughty swerving while KR passed him.WhiteBlue wrote:I'm afraid I don't understand your point. The situation was simple and clear. there wasn't space at bus stop and Hamilton cut the corner off track.
fact is there are no walls there. He wasn't allowed to keep the advantage that he gained and he ceded the advantage as required.
The rules don't say you have to give them back X seconds or estimate the time you would have lost had you not run off track do they? - I thought they said the place must be yielded, which it was - 100%.modbaraban wrote:..After an unsuccessful overtaking attempt he would be several seconds behind unless cutting the corner. The advantage wasn't really given away. Let alone the crazy swerving while KR passed him.
That doesn't make sense. Can a driver A leave the track after a bad overtaking attempt and then gain like 20 seconds cutting every possible corner and chicane one the way catching up to the driver B, get back right ahead of the driver B and then get himself right up his back and get away with it? Why not? Let's if he does that in every chicane in Monza to make up some time lost in the pitstops.Rob W wrote:The rules don't say you have to give them back X seconds or estimate the time you would have lost had you not run off track do they? - I thought they said the place must be yielded, which it was - 100%.
Sounds like mania.Rob W wrote:By the logic some are implying here, Kimi could have immediately slowed down to prevent Hamilton yielding the position and thus forcing a penalty on him.. or Kimi could have taken the position and then driven slow to keep Hamilton behind him lest a pass invoke unfair advantage claims again.. Sound silly?
That was the (sarcastic) point of it all. How much time do you have to yield? Or is it only the position that matters?modbaraban wrote:Sounds like mania.
You should have made that point earlier. Before the race, that is. Knowing that kimi would push the smashed up car to the finish line and won the raceRob W wrote:I have timed the video of Kimi repassing Hamilton he regains the lead for between 5.5 and 6.5 seconds... or about 240 - 400m of the track. (Est at an average if 160km/h - which is probably conservative)
Just how much do you need to give back?
And what if Kimi's engine had blown up five seconds later? Hamilton, by the logic applied by the FIA, would still have gained his advantage... over a car which didn't even finish ha ha!!!!.
R