2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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NathanOlder
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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falonso81 wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 21:24
Is the forecast for tomorrow showing rain all day? If Quali does not happen tomorrow, can't they find a window for Sunday?
I think everything you just asked and said has been discussed already in this thread.
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Racer X
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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falonso81 wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 21:24
Is the forecast for tomorrow showing rain all day? If Quali does not happen tomorrow, can't they find a window for Sunday?

Read a little dude.
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Schuttelberg
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Toto Wolff as usual pretending that they are slow.
"Sebastian there's very, you're a member of a very select few.. Stewart, Lauda, Piquet, Senna, Prost, Schumacher, Fangio.. VETTEL!"

Restomaniac
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Phil wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 19:59
Lol, i just checked on Google-Maps, it’s really there. Nice. 😂
I don’t get the last one.

Scratch that.......it was Lando last year. :lol: :lol:
Last edited by Restomaniac on 10 Jul 2020, 22:31, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Morteza wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 20:13
Both are correct, actually. In North American English it is written "tire", but in British English it is "tyre". According to Oxford Dictionary, of course :D
As an Englishman I don’t give a scooby how a nation who borrowed my language spells it. It’s spelled ‘tyre’. 8)

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Sieper
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Tiresome. And that is actually spelled correct even by the inventors of the English language (the saxons 😜).

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Racer X
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Restomaniac wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 22:28
Morteza wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 20:13
Both are correct, actually. In North American English it is written "tire", but in British English it is "tyre". According to Oxford Dictionary, of course :D
As an Englishman I don’t give a scooby how a nation who borrowed my language spells it. It’s spelled ‘tyre’. 8)
We in America have decided to not care what the Brits think as a part of who we are culturally.
So your not giving a scooby does not even register. We will change anything we want to change
if we feel like it.
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Big Tea
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Racer X wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 23:36
Restomaniac wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 22:28
Morteza wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 20:13
Both are correct, actually. In North American English it is written "tire", but in British English it is "tyre". According to Oxford Dictionary, of course :D
As an Englishman I don’t give a scooby how a nation who borrowed my language spells it. It’s spelled ‘tyre’. 8)
We in America have decided to not care what the Brits think as a part of who we are culturally.
So your not giving a scooby does not even register. We will change anything we want to change
if we feel like it.
You tired of it?
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cooken
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Racer X wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 23:36
Restomaniac wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 22:28
Morteza wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 20:13
Both are correct, actually. In North American English it is written "tire", but in British English it is "tyre". According to Oxford Dictionary, of course :D
As an Englishman I don’t give a scooby how a nation who borrowed my language spells it. It’s spelled ‘tyre’. 8)
We in America have decided to not care what the rest of the World think as a part of who we are culturally.
So your not giving a scooby does not even register. We will change anything we want to change
if we feel like it.
FTFY.

To be fair I think most Americans probably at least pronounce the r so noone should get too high and mighty about it.


On Merc assuming their setup is maybe geared towards low temps on Sunday?

Restomaniac
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Racer X wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 23:36
Restomaniac wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 22:28
Morteza wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 20:13
Both are correct, actually. In North American English it is written "tire", but in British English it is "tyre". According to Oxford Dictionary, of course :D
As an Englishman I don’t give a scooby how a nation who borrowed my language spells it. It’s spelled ‘tyre’. 8)
We in America have decided to not care what the Brits think as a part of who we are culturally.
So your not giving a scooby does not even register. We will change anything we want to change
if we feel like it.
Kids eh!!! :lol:

Restomaniac
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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In other news it seems there is whole lot more for the sightseers at Spielberg than first thought......Hamilton’s Asian Chophouse sounds like an awfully dicey place to eat however.

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Morteza
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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The-Race.com
Image

Formula1.com (different from what The-Race.com has come up with)
One lap pace
Image

Race pace
Image
Last edited by Morteza on 11 Jul 2020, 04:06, edited 4 times in total.
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Racer X
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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cooken wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 23:52
Racer X wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 23:36
Restomaniac wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 22:28
As an Englishman I don’t give a scooby how a nation who borrowed my language spells it. It’s spelled ‘tyre’. 8)
We in America have decided to not care what the :D rest of the World :D think as a part of who we are culturally.
So your not giving a scooby does not even register. We will change anything we want to change
if we feel like it.
FTFY.

To be fair I think most Americans probably at least pronounce the r so noone should get too high and mighty about it.


On Merc assuming their setup is maybe geared towards low temps on Sunday?
:D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D
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PlatinumZealot
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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NathanOlder wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 21:24
PlatinumZealot wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 20:25
Americans spell the 13th element "Aluminum" the British "Aluminium." i let the Americans have that one since they discovered that element and are the ones who named it.
Danish Chemist discovered in 1825 apparently?

edit. just looked, was Sir Humphry Davy from England.
I guess my memory really screwed stuff up... I stand corrected! Thatz right; not discovered by Americans but the original name, was the one the Americans adopted today..
Origin of Two Names
The origin of the two names may be attributable to element's discoverer, Sir Humphry Davy, Webster's Dictionary, or the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).

In 1808, Sir Humphry Davy identified the existence of the metal in alum, which he at first named "alumium" and later "aluminum." Davy proposed the name aluminum when referring to the element in his 1812 book Elements of Chemical Philosophy, despite his previous use of "alumium." The official name "aluminium" was adopted to conform with the -ium names of most other elements. The 1828 Webster's Dictionary used the "aluminum" spelling, which it maintained in later editions. In 1925, the American Chemical Society (ACS) decided to go from aluminium back to the original aluminum, putting the United States in the "aluminum" group. In recent years, the IUPAC had identified "aluminium" as the proper spelling, but it didn't catch on in North America, since the ACS used aluminum. The IUPAC periodic table presently lists both spellings and says both words are perfectly acceptable.
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Just_a_fan
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Re: 2020 Styrian Grand Prix - Spielberg, 10-12 July

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Racer X wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 23:36
Restomaniac wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 22:28
Morteza wrote:
10 Jul 2020, 20:13
Both are correct, actually. In North American English it is written "tire", but in British English it is "tyre". According to Oxford Dictionary, of course :D
As an Englishman I don’t give a scooby how a nation who borrowed my language spells it. It’s spelled ‘tyre’. 8)
We in America have decided to not care what the Brits think as a part of who we are culturally.
So your not giving a scooby does not even register. We will change anything we want to change
if we feel like it.
Spell it how you like. But don't call it "English". 8)

I feel slightly aggrieved when I hear USians saying "can't you speak English?" when they really mean "can't you speak USian?"
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