Isn’t this ‘issue’ already ‘done & dusted’..?
Let’s move along- nothing to see here.
Yup totally agree. Vettel been getting away with a fair bit over the years. Now wearing Red he's unbeatablemaxxer wrote: ↑18 Oct 2019, 20:38They team has all the telemetry of when he dropped the cluth or such so its nonsense to talk about margin.iotar__ wrote: ↑18 Oct 2019, 14:25- It should not matterSilent Storm wrote: ↑18 Oct 2019, 00:00
Kimi purposely let others pass in the hopes that he wouldn't get penalised for the jump start as he didn't gain any position. It's similar to how you let the other car pass if you run off the track and overtake someone. Vettel was on pole position, he couldn't do that and let 20 cars pass him as that would be dangerous.
- It makes sense in cutting corners/overtakes but not with starts. One is wheel to wheel racing with all the risks and circumstances the other clear cut, 01, measurable transgression.
- it is still dangerous (another reason) doesn't matter if it's Raikkonen's or Vettel's case. Third reason: risk/reward and no punishment if it goes wrong at the most important stage of the race. Yeah try to jump start, if you're within a limit you gain if you are not just give back position - it's not good enough .
- didn't follow Vettel's case, I have no stomach for FIA BS, I know they brought out some measurements
- (correct me if I'm wrong) remember when Maldonado started in a wrong box (one behind) and got a penalty? So much for not gaining an advantage as an excuse.
Kimi messed up his start and got the penalty even though so this driver should also have had it.
But it seems it is the veto team so they need them.Same as vettel deserved a few black flags and race bans before
Do you have any proof of that?aral wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 13:28Vettel wasnt punished as he car was not far enough forward to trigger the sensor and his wheels did not cross over the white grid box line. This line is the point at where the sensor kicks in. Bottas also did the same, but oddly, many people are not calling for action against him. A little bit of bias, methinks?
LOL so many cheats this year by FIARRARI I had forgotten that Vettel FIA con even happened...El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 14:02Assuming you're talking about Monza, there was a picture of his car completely off the edge of the white line which marked the limit of the circuit. It was posted on this forum somewhere. The stewards then fudged some explanation about how maybe from another hypothetical angle the edge of the tyre MIGHT still be overhanging where the edge of the white line was, so therefore they didn't see fit to penalise him. That, just like this, was a ridiculous decision which defied visual evidence.sosic2121 wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 13:37That's not correct, there was no concrete evidence.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 12:30[lSecond time they've disregarded video proof this season to fudge a penalty. (Vettel again, in Monza)
What about Bottas' start in Austria 2017?
You can't possibly be talking about no evidence for the jump start- just watch the beginning of the race again...
FIARRARI rules again.
Ferrari received 4 penalties in Suzuka:
Yes, but notice how despite being blatantly obvious penalties that could have been applied during the race which would give other drivers the chance to finish ahead on the day... they applied the penalties once the title was already officially gone. In other words, once again they didn't want to cost Ferrari the title directly but when something else happens to offset such a penalty they are fine with giving a penalty. In this case they officially lost the title to Merc, penalties became effectively meaningless.Scorpaguy wrote: ↑19 Oct 2019, 20:01Ferrari received 4 penalties in Suzuka:
1. Lec - 5-sec post race for Max incident
2. Lec - 2 penalty points on license for Max incident
3. Lec - 10-sec post race for unsafe car (from Max incident)
4. Fer - 25K euro fine for unsafe car
Please note I was not picking a fight/choosing sides/defending eventualities...just stating facts. However, IMHO, all lucid FIA officials have known that both title fights were effectively over long before Suzuka.drunkf1fan wrote: ↑20 Oct 2019, 02:48Yes, but notice how despite being blatantly obvious penalties that could have been applied during the race which would give other drivers the chance to finish ahead on the day... they applied the penalties once the title was already officially gone. In other words, once again they didn't want to cost Ferrari the title directly but when something else happens to offset such a penalty they are fine with giving a penalty. In this case they officially lost the title to Merc, penalties became effectively meaningless.
Last year Vettel hit Hamilton twice under a safety car, once by going too early then deliberately hitting Hamilton. That penalty could have been given in 20 seconds, instead it was given like 40 minutes later after like a 30 minute cleaning the track red flag. When did they give it, right after they decided to give Hamilton the message that he had to pit to replace the headrest. At which point they felt more comfortable giving Vettel a stop/go penalty. Before then they somehow took an absurdly long time even with absolutely nothing to do under the red flag and couldn't give it but the second it could be offset, bam.
Same goes back in 2008, Ham locks up, never been penalised at the start for locking up and hitting no one and only costing yourself time but they investigated it. Massa goes all four wheels off track, cuts a corner and tags Hamilton deliberately (the only way he could do it was cutting the corner, there was no reason to cut the corner other than because you decided you were going to try to hit Hamilton)... again FIA were going to be in a position they had to give Ferrari a harsh penalty but whoa, they have Hamilton 'under investigation'.... for locking up, and they immediately gave them both the same penalty for laughably different incidents, one close to a black flag and one that never ever gets penalised.
Spa... Charlie tells HAmilton twice that the pass he made is fine, there is zero rule saying what he did was wrong. FIA penalise Hamilton, bumps Massa to a win and then write a new rule that enables that punishment for the next race onwards but they penalised Hamilton for it before it was a rule.
It's easy to give a penalty when you can **** the other team as well, giving Ferrari a harsh and deserved penalty where it would for instance, directly take a title away from them or directly drop a Ferrari driver a bunch of points down on a rival in a title fight, haven't seen that happen in as long as I've watched F1.
There was no picture showing that Vettel is out because tire was partially in the air. There was no bird view angle.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 14:02Assuming you're talking about Monza, there was a picture of his car completely off the edge of the white line which marked the limit of the circuit. It was posted on this forum somewhere. The stewards then fudged some explanation about how maybe from another hypothetical angle the edge of the tyre MIGHT still be overhanging where the edge of the white line was, so therefore they didn't see fit to penalise him. That, just like this, was a ridiculous decision which defied visual evidence.sosic2121 wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 13:37That's not correct, there was no concrete evidence.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 12:30[lSecond time they've disregarded video proof this season to fudge a penalty. (Vettel again, in Monza)
What about Bottas' start in Austria 2017?
You can't possibly be talking about no evidence for the jump start- just watch the beginning of the race again...
Just FYI, taking off a bit of steering lock is how you correct understeer, so it is not an indication of malicious intent.
he wasn't taking it off to grip up, i know what you mean but that's not what he was doing. he flicked it, just for an instant, to take himself wider than he was going already. It's something obviously that can be explained away as a mistake but I don't believe it I'm with Karun, that he could have avoided contact.
Oh, so you believe in the ‘he MIGHT not have been fully over the line if we had a hypothetical picture that doesn’t exist rather than the one we DO have which does show him over the line.’ explanation/argument then. Oh dear.sosic2121 wrote: ↑20 Oct 2019, 10:26There was no picture showing that Vettel is out because tire was partially in the air. There was no bird view angle.El Scorchio wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 14:02Assuming you're talking about Monza, there was a picture of his car completely off the edge of the white line which marked the limit of the circuit. It was posted on this forum somewhere. The stewards then fudged some explanation about how maybe from another hypothetical angle the edge of the tyre MIGHT still be overhanging where the edge of the white line was, so therefore they didn't see fit to penalise him. That, just like this, was a ridiculous decision which defied visual evidence.
You can't possibly be talking about no evidence for the jump start- just watch the beginning of the race again...
Bottas didn't get the penalty in Austria for jump start, although moved before lights and gained massive advantage. So I don't understand what's the deal here!?
What about Leclerc's penalties?
First, they are given in a way that he and Ferrari can't do anything about it. imo that was unfair.
On the other hand, about Lec-Ves.
Is it too late to give Verstapen a penalty for similar incident in Austria?!
I have not seen a picture that's showing outside of the track! On the other hand that picture is not showing that he's within track either.El Scorchio wrote: ↑20 Oct 2019, 14:53Oh, so you believe in the ‘he MIGHT not have been fully over the line if we had a hypothetical picture that doesn’t exist rather than the one we DO have which does show him over the line.’ explanation/argument then. Oh dear.
It’s rulings like that which make the stewards a total laughing stock.
I agree the way Leclerc got his penalties was dumb as well, (why did they have to leave it until after the race?) but not forcing him into the pits with a dangerous car was by far dumber. I don’t really believe there’s a big bias toward certain teams, but the stewards do themselves no favours with consistency or error in decision making and keep leaving themselves open to rightful criticism.