2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan
Just_a_fan
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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izzy wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:58

In 2016 Rosberg got 3 penalties all for the exact same thing: driving straight past the apex not steering and NOT on the racing line and then blocking/punting the other car on the far side. Lewis as you say never gets that penalty, because he apexes.

Max basically did a Rosberg, but not quite as blatantly which is how after 3 hours of stewardly studying he got away with it. Must've been close
The key here is that Rosberg didn't steer in to the corner, he literally drove Hamilton off track by preventing him from turning in to the corner. Max turned in and went around the corner. Max did not prevent Leclerc from taking the corner, Rosberg did prevent Hamilton from taking the corner. That's the difference.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.

Jolle
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:03
izzy wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:58

In 2016 Rosberg got 3 penalties all for the exact same thing: driving straight past the apex not steering and NOT on the racing line and then blocking/punting the other car on the far side. Lewis as you say never gets that penalty, because he apexes.

Max basically did a Rosberg, but not quite as blatantly which is how after 3 hours of stewardly studying he got away with it. Must've been close
The key here is that Rosberg didn't steer in to the corner, he literally drove Hamilton off track by preventing him from turning in to the corner. Max turned in and went around the corner. Max did not prevent Leclerc from taking the corner, Rosberg did prevent Hamilton from taking the corner. That's the difference.
plus, it was Rosberg defending, closing the inside and then, indeed drive straight on "outbreaking" himself, while Leclerc was off track with two wheels on the outside, you can't not defend a corner more if you tried.

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TAG
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:00
sosic2121 wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:43
I guess ferrari fans are disgusted with this sport to the point they don't care any more. I don't.
Were you disgusted back then too? :wink: :lol: :lol:
https://youtu.be/0AhNs_W5OQU
You kidding me? That was the inspiration for some of the current generation F1 drivers! I'm at the point where I hope Leclerc wins a championship next year just so that this decade long pent up frustration can be alleviated and reduce the suffering. People want what they want and no amount of logic or evidence will ever change the mind of an impassioned fan.

Look at me, I'm still licking my wounds from my favorite driver's horrible performance this weekend. So I know what I'm talking about. :mrgreen: :lol:
माकडाच्या हाती कोलीत

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diffuser
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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rogazilla wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 17:27
diffuser wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 17:16
...

The problem I see is, why would anyone take the outside ever again, when you can stay on the inside and drive the competitor off the road?
Base on what I found in the regulation and the way I read it. If the lead car block the inside, to make the apex on the inside you have to brake harder and take the corner slower and have less exit speed. Hence, many after blocking inside will try to move back towards racing line to carry more speed through the apex. The regulation says defender who moved offline to defend must leave 1 car width of space for the attacker when moving back toward racing line. For the attacker after being block on the inside, taking the outside is viable because defender must leave space.

Therefore there is no issue with attacker trying to go around the outside to pass. That's not what happened as Lec was the defender and Max was the attacker.
Ok, not sure I like it but it is better than the alternative.

joshuagore
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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henry wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:01
dans79 wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:24
henry wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:07
If that were the case then in the circumstance that they left the corner side by side with Max a little in front Max could, under the rule being discussed, legitimately edge Charles to the side of the track.
If you are the outside you are always going to get pushed off, just by the physics of the issue. If you are on the inside you will have a shallower entry into the turn and thus are going to go wide on exit. This why you see the out side defending drive turn in behind the driver attempting the pass so they can try and get the power down early and re-take the pass.

Lewis and Nico in Bahrain 2014 is the example that jumps to mind first. Each time Lewis gets Nico to take a very tight and compromised entry to turn 1, so that he could then cut inside and get the power down sooner.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_GWdS5RP0Q


henry wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:07
I’m not criticising you, your interpretation is as valid as any. The rules are so shoddily written that they only cover a very limited set of circumstances with any sort of precision. You’d think that after nearly 70 years they’d do better than that.
Personally I think the rules are written well enough.

I'm not criticizing you or anyone else here, but I think the modern F1 fan is the problem. The modern fan thinks their should be a specific black and white super dumbded down rule for everything. They think the stewards, the FIA, and everyone else is biased against their driver or team!
Physics has NOTHING to do with it. It’s a choice of the driver on the inside line where they position their car.

The Hamilton/Rosberg incident was also an example where this interpretation of the rules prevented good racing. Had Hamilton not crowded Rosberg off we would have seen the spectacle of them RACING side by side to the next corner, where Hamilton would also have the inside line, and maybe beyond.

The rules as being interpreted encourage one shot overtakes, dive down the inside pass or crash.

I’m not a modern fan, I started following F1 in the 60s. I don’t care particularly for any team or driver. I’m interested in the technicalities of the sport, and as a piece of technical writing the rules are rubbish. They fail to define many of the terms involved and don’t cover the generality of circumstances involved in racing but instead focus on a few specific instances.

This has left the “rules” to be set by the players. As always the players keep pushing at their rules until there is a sudden decision to rein one in. Weaving on the straights, moving under braking etc.

When I started watching they raced between the kerbs not over and beyond them and in the main they didn’t force opponents over the kerbs and off the track, injury or worse was the consequence. Now the consequences are different and the rules should have been carefully written to encourage racing given the changing circumstances. In my opinion they haven’t been.


Oh and you didn’t answer my specific point about Max pushing Charles off on the straight under the interpretation you offered of a “completed overtake”.
So if I read you right... you are suggesting this is a modern day block pass... except due to runoff the block pass can be achieved by being merely parallel to the other racer prior to apex? The inside racer gets to use track limits to achieve the block rather than having to leave space if another racer is parallel to them? I do believe this rule strips the fans of 'more racing' but I don't know that I want a rule either as I can't imagine how it would be written to not create more fiasco. How would a rule go? If a racer is alongside you then your line must consider a faux wall at track out for purposes of redefining your line giving space for the other racer?

In the case of this race and this pass I think Charles could have predicted the dive bomb approach of Max and squared up the turn with some early braking thus giving him the inside line and us the chance for another w2w encounter next turn. Or better yet, keep that inside line, brake way late, knowing max will be on the outside, and understeer into the apex and let Max decide how the line looks over the kerb, force his style of adversity on him.

izzy
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:03
The key here is that Rosberg didn't steer in to the corner, he literally drove Hamilton off track by preventing him from turning in to the corner. Max turned in and went around the corner. Max did not prevent Leclerc from taking the corner, Rosberg did prevent Hamilton from taking the corner. That's the difference.
Well yes max did turn in, just a few metres late...
Image
and it was a crucial difference, but it could've gone either way as that's not the racing line is it and it's only being on 'the racing line' that would allow him to push Charles off as he did

But Max did totally prevent Charles taking the corner. Do i need to post the next pic? :P

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langedweil
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Shrieker wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 15:01
langedweil wrote:
30 Jun 2019, 23:55

Lec turned in causing the contact
First let's watch this. Notice how Verstappen doesn't turn his wheel as much as he did the previous lap.

Second, have a look here. This is but half a moment before contact. Notice the space inside the yellow circle ? Notice where Verstappen's nose is roughly pointed towards ? "Leclerc turned in on him!" doesn't cut it here, sorry. Especially when we have the previous lap to compare with, which makes it an open and shut case. Red Bull's home race, 100k+ Dutch fans, Honda's first win in the hybrid era are what prevented a penalty for Max.
We could go on for days, but let's agree to disagree. You're on the barge-out-leave-a-carwidth-space path, I'm on the racingline-own-the-corner path. We will not agree, let's just leave it like that.
No hard feelings whatsoever ..
HuggaWugga !

sosic2121
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:00
sosic2121 wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:43
I guess ferrari fans are disgusted with this sport to the point they don't care any more. I don't.
Were you disgusted back then too? :wink: :lol: :lol:
https://youtu.be/0AhNs_W5OQU
dirty move by Michael. he made couple of those

Just_a_fan
Just_a_fan
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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langedweil wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:34

We could go on for days, but let's agree to disagree. You're on the barge-out-leave-a-carwidth-space path, I'm on the racingline-own-the-corner path. We will not agree, let's just leave it like that.
No hard feelings whatsoever ..
Obligatory XKCD cartoon at this point:
Image

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.

roon
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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What document deals with racecraft? Rules on passing, defending, etc. The F1 Sporting Regulations and the International Sporting Code make no mention of such matters. Hoping there is one and the stewards room during a race isn't an analog of what we do here. "Well, I seem to remember..." :lol:

roon
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:00
sosic2121 wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:43
I guess ferrari fans are disgusted with this sport to the point they don't care any more. I don't.
Were you disgusted back then too? :wink: :lol: :lol:
https://youtu.be/0AhNs_W5OQU
Oh, so that's why they were called gravel traps. They were 'traps' that could 'trap' a car. Interesting.

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GPR-A
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:00
sosic2121 wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 21:43
I guess ferrari fans are disgusted with this sport to the point they don't care any more. I don't.
Were you disgusted back then too? :wink: :lol: :lol:
https://youtu.be/0AhNs_W5OQU
I was, with Vileneuve. Classic dive bomb move from Vileneuve, aka Ricciardo. Look at how he was locking his breaks on front right. He jumped into available space by carrying too much speed and bumped off Michael from racing line. He was already unstable when he was hitting breaks and got a bit of bump from the curb.

Unfortunately, there was no F1Technical for people discuss that move and the history bought the viewpoint of those who had the footage and could comment. I am sure, in today's age, that topic would have consumed over 100 pages here.

Image

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langedweil
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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Just_a_fan wrote:
02 Jul 2019, 00:20
langedweil wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 22:34
Obligatory XKCD cartoon at this point:
https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/duty_calls.png

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
:lol: :lol: :lol:
HuggaWugga !

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Artur Craft
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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GPR -A, didn't you say Red Bulll wouldn't win a single race this season?! And what about those saying RB had a poor chassis?

They humiliated (fell down to 7th and still won it) Ferrari and the mighty Mercedes on a power demanding track with loads of aero corners as well. This win wasn't a fluke, it was on pure genuine pace.

Newey embarrassed Mercedes and their aero department that is double of RB.

Pirelli makes Mercedes look mighty on normal cooler conditions. If we had proper tyres, Mercedes would be shown up and everybody would realise their car is not that mighty, by design, it's just the tyres making it so.

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ringo
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Re: 2019 [R09] Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg, 28-30 June

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I think ferrari lost leclerc this race. I remember when he was asking if the pace was the right pace to be going at.
Ferrari told him it is fine and he is doing a good job.
Imagine how easy a win this would have been if he had trusted his gut feelings and be 15 seconds up the road from slow poke Bottas?
Anyhow, as soon as Max started to attack they should have told Leclerc to step on it. They waited until Max was right behind.
For Sure!!