Mattchu wrote: ↑28 Sep 2020, 19:18
What I found rather odd was that you could go off at turn 2 then floor it through some bollards and rejoin the track at a much higher speed than those who took the corner legitimately, although as seen with Carlos Sainz, a slight misjudgement means you smack into a concrete wall and it`s race over.
How does a modern day track have such an odd, potentially dangerous area in this day and age! This part of the track will hopefully be changed for next year.
If you go back and watch the 2014 start, you will see that turn 2 had no curbs or bollards. Hence why even though Rosberg locked up and missed the turn he came out of the turn substantially in front of Hamilton. He could just floor it and keep going.
They exist now to try and prevent people from gaining an advantage by leaving the track. However like many things with the FIA, because they worked in the past as a hasty fix to an issue, surely they will work indefinitely. At work we call this the "next new shinny disease". Some people never want to revisit a decision to ensure its the best one going forward, they just want to move on to the next thing. The FIA does this a lot.
For example if you really wanted to make sure drivers didn't gain an advantage, you wouldn't put the curbs at the edge of the track. You would use them to frame where they have to re-enter the track. Thus the likelihood of a car becoming airborne from hitting the curbs is non-existent, and the the drivers risk damaging the floor by not re-joining the track in the appropriate way.
However, even when they do something like I mentioned above the still manage to shoot themselves in the foot. for example.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/fia- ... e/4481316/
The Mexican was especially annoyed because he had gone around the track limits bollard as the rules demanded.
But the FIA was unhappy because Perez rejoined ahead of cars that had been in front of him when he entered the corner, and therefore was deemed to have gained a lasting advantage.
In race notes sent to teams before the French Grand Prix, Masi had made it clear that even if drivers go around the track limits bollard, "the driver must only rejoin the track when it is safe to do so and without gaining a lasting advantage."
Imo, in the Perez's case the FIA should have placed curbs and bollards in a way that ensures a driver can't gain an advantage, not expect a driver to try and determine on the fly what constitutes a lasting advantage.