Think a bit before you accuse fellow forumers of talking rubbish and associate them with crackpots like the woman in the video! This isn't the way this board likes us to conduct discussions. You can attack my points. I would appreciate if you could refrain from such posts which I perceive as a personal attack.modbaraban wrote:Anyone seen Michael Schumacher during the race? No?
A-ha!!! That's coz he was busy rigging the race!
PS: While you are talking rubbish here, a much bigger conspiracy is going on. Now it's happening now !
It's the way the rule has always previously been applied: if you gain a place by cutting the course, you must return it. There's nothing about 'lifting completely' in the rules. McLaren twice asked Charlie Whiting if it looked OK to him and he twice said yes; Hamilton had such an advantage over Raikkonen at that point that, had the FIA voiced any concerns, they were prepared to return the place and try again later.Ciro Pabón wrote:That's not the rule. The rule says you should not "gain advantage". Hamilton himself said after the race that he did not wanted Kimi to fly away (or something like that, I already quoted him) so he did not lift completely. I think that's the reason for the penalty: he gained an advantage. So, that's the reason the stewards have (plus the telemetry, I imagine).WhiteBlue wrote:...Hamilton has even let Reikkonen past completely...
Welcome to the board!CZOLG wrote:My first post here.
Many people in the discussion seem to have a point, sometimes contradictory ones.
Thing is rules are not and never will be perfect.
This happens in football all the time, may bad decisions have been made in many games, obvious referee mistakes etc.
Yet people seem to respect them in a better way and not accuse FIA of helping any particular team or setting up the championship.
I do not understand while I have read so many violent accusations in this thread?
Fair point.myurr wrote: I don't think that many people who are grumpy are necessarily grumpy because the rules are difficult to apply. I think if this was a one off incident then people would be a little bit upset but would give the FIA the benefit of the doubt that it may have been a marginal call and they had to decide one way or the other.
The problem is that the FIA lost the benefit of the doubt many many years ago, and have been perceived to have been consistently biased in favour of one team at the expense of all others. From banning Renaults mass damper system, giving Ferrari the lightest possible penalties, coming down hard on every other team, etc. it more often than not seems to be Ferrari who benefit from each ruling.
See Massa at Valencia - in GP2 they have been consistent in giving away drive through penalties. The F1 rules say that for the offense Massa was eventually found guilty of, he should have had a drive through penalty. However they get let off.
In this case with Hamilton McLaren knew what the rules were and tried to comply - going as far as twice checking with the FIA whether they were in compliance, and twice being told they were.
It's the equivalent of a referee not giving a penalty during a football match and telling all the players that everything was okay, only to change their mind 3 hours later and retrospectively award a goal and change the result of the game.
In my mind, and coupled with all the other examples of bias, that makes a mockery of the idea that F1 is a fair sport.
Ps. And to all those pointing out that Alonso had to give the place back a second time when he pulled a move like Hamilton, Renault were told by the Race Director to do so. In this instance McLaren were expressly told that they didn't have to. Poles apart.
In fact Renault were told afterwards by the FIA that they did not have to give the place back the second time. So the precedent in this case actually favours LH/Mclaren rather than the stewards ruling.Ps. And to all those pointing out that Alonso had to give the place back a second time when he pulled a move like Hamilton, Renault were told by the Race Director to do so. In this instance McLaren were expressly told that they didn't have to. Poles apart.
wow... dreamerWhiteBlue wrote:Trulli is speculating as video analysis further up in this thread has shown. Had Hamilton lifted and followed Reikkonen around bus stop he could have raced him on the strait just the same. He had superior traction in the wet. when Kimi pushed him outside on the run to la source he used it to pass behind the Ferrari and gain the superior inside. there was no slipstreaming effect at all. Trulli's comparison with Monza is like comparing apples and bananas.
I'm not totally sure, not being an F1 driver myself, but in the wet it's been stated that there's more than one line and it's often grippier offline than on, as the water stands on the rubber rather than draining away or being pushed aside by the passing tyre.bizadfar wrote:wow... dreamer
There is one line, you ever heard the technique where in tight corners like that the driver infront will hesitate to accel, then plant it and get the instant advantage of being on the throttle earlier before the other guy could react.
Seriously, you are wack, same position as if he had no cut the chicane? side by side at the s/f
Some serisouly --- up dreamer people here. Probably never driven in their life or a bunch of fanboys either camp.
Hmmm. Please underline the bit where I attacked any of the posters?WhiteBlue wrote:Think a bit before you accuse fellow forumers of talking rubbish and associate them with crackpots like the woman in the video! This isn't the way this board likes us to conduct discussions. You can attack my points. I would appreciate if you could refrain from such posts which I perceive as a personal attack.modbaraban wrote:Anyone seen Michael Schumacher during the race? No?
A-ha!!! That's coz he was busy rigging the race!
PS: While you are talking rubbish here, a much bigger conspiracy is going on. Now it's happening now !
Agree the Mclaren retains and generates more heat in the tyres than the ferrari. But please show me more than one line in the last corner in the situation they were in. If Hamilton stayed nose to tail behind him I seriously doubt he would tighten up steering angle instead of using the full width of the exit. Maybe mid corner/entry different lines for that corner in normal situation (not that overtaking scene ofc)myurr wrote:I'm not totally sure, not being an F1 driver myself, but in the wet it's been stated that there's more than one line and it's often grippier offline than on, as the water stands on the rubber rather than draining away or being pushed aside by the passing tyre.bizadfar wrote:wow... dreamer
There is one line, you ever heard the technique where in tight corners like that the driver infront will hesitate to accel, then plant it and get the instant advantage of being on the throttle earlier before the other guy could react.
Seriously, you are wack, same position as if he had no cut the chicane? side by side at the s/f
Some serisouly --- up dreamer people here. Probably never driven in their life or a bunch of fanboys either camp.
Also in the conditions then the majority of the problem for the drivers wasn't standing water, it was retaining heat in the tyres. This is something that the McLaren has a supreme advantage. Indeed look at Hamiltons acceleration down the next straight - it's a given that there was a 6kmph speed difference between them as they crossed the line. Hamilton was able to more than make up that difference **and** then out brake the Ferrari by quite some margin. Plus Kimi was really struggling to get the power down immediately out of the corner.
So whilst Trulli has much greater insight than I do, he's never actually driven the McLaren or the Ferrari in those conditions. I also believe he was unable to get anywhere near Hamilton's pace in the wet at Silverstone, so maybe Lewis knows something he doesn't.
woohoo wrote:no no, he just happened to crash into Prost on two occasions where the the championship was decided.Belatti wrote:Senna never broke rules.
Hamilton did in France, nor in Spa.