You're trolling now, be careful or the billy goat will get you...
You're trolling now, be careful or the billy goat will get you...
There was a point made by one commentator that you can go wide on a "not quicker off" corner having gone quicker in the preceding "quicker off" corner. You gain more overall because the controlled corner makes more difference. It's further clever playing of the rules.Cuky wrote: ↑23 Jun 2019, 22:00That was the case in qualifying for most if not all of the drivers, especially on the outside of T6, but as always FIA deemed that in that case there is no time gained so they allowed it. As if drivers would go there lap after lap after lap if that wasn't the faster way to go through that cornersubcritical71 wrote: ↑23 Jun 2019, 21:25As a point, Vettel set his fastest lap while putting all 4 over the white line at least once....
I feel like the sport needs to look at other sports and rewrite to move forward.
Rules need to be cut and dry, like you say, there should be no room for intention, feelings or bias. I feel too many people want outcome based penalties and I feel this is were you start introducing the grey areas. Penalize per the rule book and adjust the rule book if the penalty is now deemed unfair or it has outlived its usefulness.astracrazy wrote: ↑23 Jun 2019, 23:44I feel like the sport needs to look at other sports and rewrite to move forward.
The rules and penalty system has just been added too and modified so much its either too confusing or rules are conflicting. They need to strip it back and go again. You break a rule and there are 5 different penalties that can be applied.
Today we had a driver follow one rule by going around a bollard but still managed to break another by doing it. Another got two penalties but didnt get penalised earlier for doing the same thing because “they werent in the same race”.
It needs to be cut and dry.
Tennis.astracrazy wrote: ↑23 Jun 2019, 23:44I feel like the sport needs to look at other sports and rewrite to move forward.
Let's be fair:Just_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jun 2019, 01:02Outcome based penalties could be done:
1. Rejoin requiring evasive action = 5s
2. Rejoin resulting in contact = 10s
3. Rejoin resulting in damage = drive through.
4. Rejoin gaining an advantage = give back advantage. Failure to give back = drive through.
Etc.
this isn't correct at all. His lap times dropped massively before the VSC. The gap was at it's biggest around 8.4 seconds on lap 44. Lap 50 was the VSC, the gap reduced between those laps, it was 5.4 seconds on lap 47, 3.5 seconds on lap 49.
Yup, people are getting super weird about the bollards. The rule is you can't gain an advantage by cutting, it was clear he did. The bollard rules are about making it safer to rejoin and also making it take longer in the case of it happening when no other drivers are around. Here we had the start of the race, he passed two cars, the advantage was obvious, if this was middle of the race and the nearest cars were 5 seconds ahead and behind it would be far harder to gage what level of advantage he gained. If you could blast straight back onto the track you could gain several seconds without gaining a place, the bollard is also meant to make it take longer to rejoin as well as coming on in a safer position, but it never was intended to, never has done and was never believed to have replaced normal rules.cooken wrote: ↑23 Jun 2019, 23:58Is going around the bollard supposed to be a penalty in and if itself, or is it there to ensure cars filter back on to the track in a safer spot? Also, did going around actually cause him to gain the advantage? No, cutting the corner is what have the advantage, he just broke one rule instead of two.
Thinking logically, Perez screwed up and went off the race track. There's no way he should be able to benefit from that. In this situation common sense agrees with the ruling.
Note the rules about overtaking off track / gaining an advantage don't say anything about bollards or the route taken
True, but what I meant by outcome based is more race outcome stuff like, “there was no one else around so why does it matter”, “the ruling affected the race outcome”, “the collision didn’t cause him to retire”. Your example is what I would say is black and white.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jun 2019, 01:02Outcome based penalties could be done:
1. Rejoin requiring evasive action = 5s
2. Rejoin resulting in contact = 10s
3. Rejoin resulting in damage = drive through.
4. Rejoin gaining an advantage = give back advantage. Failure to give back = drive through.
Etc.