ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑02 Oct 2019, 04:31
Manoah2u wrote: ↑02 Oct 2019, 03:09
ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑01 Oct 2019, 18:39
They didn't want KUB'S brakes to fail and put him, his car and it's parts to break, what is so hard to understand?
indeed, what's so hard to understand the team's OWN WORDS that they retired his car to save parts
what's so hard to understand on the mountain of evidence presented to you in several posts
Save parts from a possible crash due to malfunctioning brakes, it's not hard at all, it makes perfect sense. Both cars are the same, if one malfunctions with a brake failure that causes a crash, then the chances of the other one doing the same are higher than they are willing to risk. The team did not want to risk having both cars in the wall due to the same malfunction.
What is so hard for you to understand?
Good lord you're so extremely stubborn.
https://f1i.com/news/356812-kubica-unha ... sochi.html
We opted to retire Robert in order to conserve parts ahead of the intense flyaway races which end the season," revealed Willliams senior race engineer Dave Robson
https://formulaspy.com/f1/williams-reti ... arts-64907
A statement from the team later said that they were investigating the cause of Russell’s retirement from the race, while Kubica was retired out of a desire to conserve parts ‘as we were not in contention for a points finish’.
nothing to do with supposed brake failure, which YOU claim you know, but the team itselfs claims OTHERWISE.
https://www.racefans.net/2019/09/29/wil ... rve-parts/
“An issue shortly after the restart caused George to lock a front wheel, damaging the car further
https://www.planetf1.com/f1-races/russi ... etirement/
The Williams driver was enjoying a solid race when he crashed under the Virtual Safety Car with a mechanical fault, bringing out a full Safety Car and ending his race.
“To be honest we don’t really know what the issue was,” Russell said to reporters in the paddock.
“I just went into the corner and the whole car just bottomed out, so I couldn’t turn and just went straight on into the wall.
“We don’t know if something went under the car or if it was the front wing or if something broke, but yeah we’ll look into it.”
if you actually look into this video
https://www.formula1.com/en/video/2019/ ... y_Car.html
you will see there's much more than a lockup. you can see sparks flying from the front and indeed the car bottoming out. a car bottoming out will certainly cause a lock up, that does
NOT mean it's a brake failure, even though it looked a bit like that at first.
you can stand by your faultive point as much as you want, have fun in being wrong. the team themselves mentioned the issue and have never mentioned it as brake failure. if it was that, they would have said that. they didn't.
if they would have retired robert's car because of a lingering brake failure, they would have mentioned that.
THEY DIDNT.
what they did mention has been repeated a thousand times by now to you and in this very post. that they
conserve parts because they're cheap and have huge financial problems and are shafting Kubica and handing his parts to George, as has been done the entire year, really.
again, what's so hard to understand the
literal statements of the team
and drivers?