Btw, one thing that is being ignored here is that most start straights are not flat, most are very slightly down hill and at least one track I can think of is uphill.
This has to be taken into consideration when determining movement tolerances.
None of that matters if the drivers keep the brakes on until the lights have gone out. Get rid of the tolerances silliness to make it was more simple and straightforward. It can be a very simple sport when not absolutely and unnecessarily confounded by overly complex and ambiguous rules.
Leclercs mirror. It detached later in the race
If you cant see how that matters then you are frankly beyond help.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 22:33None of that matters if the drivers keep the brakes on until the lights have gone out. Get rid of the tolerances silliness to make it was more simple and straightforward. It can be a very simple sport when not absolutely and unnecessarily confounded by overly complex and ambiguous rules.
No, he's right. on am up or down hill the left foot holding the car is simple and manageable. If a driver starts moving because he let the car roll forward on the hill, then he's still guilty of a jump start.djos wrote: ↑15 Oct 2019, 00:19If you cant see how that matters then you are frankly beyond help.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 22:33None of that matters if the drivers keep the brakes on until the lights have gone out. Get rid of the tolerances silliness to make it was more simple and straightforward. It can be a very simple sport when not absolutely and unnecessarily confounded by overly complex and ambiguous rules.
.If you cant see how that matters then you are frankly beyond help.
My point is there is always going to be some movement (admittedly it should be very small) and therefore a requirement for a margin of error.
Is it my imagination or does Bottas get an amazing start also. Looks like he went with Vettel and effectively jumped the start without being out of the box either. Compare to LeClerc and Hamilton.RZS10 wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 17:22It's really interesting how much Bottas benefitted from Vettel's totally not false start, he clearly just went when he saw Vettel move, just compare his start to that of Leclerc and Hamilton - he starts moving one frame after the lights go out
https://i.imgur.com/cpwg3be.gif
No, brakes heat up and take wear actually slowing a car down it's the friction between the pad and the disc as the disc moves. When the disc isn't moving then it takes extremely little braking power to stay still and won't at all add extra heat.Zarathustra wrote: ↑15 Oct 2019, 03:34Isn’t it a bad thing to keep applying the brakes- when they are hot, while stationary?
That theory has already been debunked.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 01:14Well. I have to point out that Bottas only beat Hamilton because of the team making Hamilton do an unnecessarily pit stop from the lead. If they hadn’t altered Hamilton’s strategy then that’s a win for him.zeph wrote: ↑13 Oct 2019, 22:47I’m glad Bottas took a victory today, and he got the vote for DOTD, so good for him.
This weekend confirmed my suspicions that the “super talents” are only human and entirely beatable when things don’t go their way. Albon was just as quick as Verstappen qualifying, and Leclerc had no answer to Vettel’s devastatingly quick pole lap.
Too bad both Ferraris had poor starts, but it did look like Mercedes was quicker on race pace, so I doubt they’d have been able to secure victory even if the starts had been perfect. I did love how Vettel defended against Hamilton.
Bottas beat Hamilton, Vettel beat Leclerc, and Albon beat Verstappen. This was an interesting day.
Oh, and can somebody give Sainz a quicker car? That dude is impressively consistent.
By who?zeph wrote: ↑15 Oct 2019, 05:54That theory has already been debunked.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 01:14Well. I have to point out that Bottas only beat Hamilton because of the team making Hamilton do an unnecessarily pit stop from the lead. If they hadn’t altered Hamilton’s strategy then that’s a win for him.zeph wrote: ↑13 Oct 2019, 22:47I’m glad Bottas took a victory today, and he got the vote for DOTD, so good for him.
This weekend confirmed my suspicions that the “super talents” are only human and entirely beatable when things don’t go their way. Albon was just as quick as Verstappen qualifying, and Leclerc had no answer to Vettel’s devastatingly quick pole lap.
Too bad both Ferraris had poor starts, but it did look like Mercedes was quicker on race pace, so I doubt they’d have been able to secure victory even if the starts had been perfect. I did love how Vettel defended against Hamilton.
Bottas beat Hamilton, Vettel beat Leclerc, and Albon beat Verstappen. This was an interesting day.
Oh, and can somebody give Sainz a quicker car? That dude is impressively consistent.