Phil wrote: ↑29 Sep 2020, 09:21
How visible the area was where Hamilton did his starts is irrelevant. What is relevant is what it said (and didnt) say in the directors notes.
is that you defense while causing a potentially dangerous situation? all the experience and common sense they had and you need a piece of paper to tell you where it is safe and not to stop on a race track? that is excluding the option of clearing the issue with stewards before hand by your race engineer
Speaking of Brazil, race notes are also not exactly crystal clear about the spot where you can stop - "pit exit", but the big difference is marshals there with white flags to warn coming cars if someone is stationary there, did you see any marshals in Sochi there in those places? and if you didn't, what does that tell you?
I'm not arguing about the technical legality of his actions, I'm arguing the safety aspect of it, and potential race benefit, yes, it was potentially dangerous to stop there, and yes, there is a potential racing benefit from performing practice start there, hence the in race penalty and not some finger waving and monetary penalty, which a team like Mercedes wouldn't even blink at
and I only saw him stopping once, I don't even know where the second place he stopped was, but I'm guessing it was something similar, else they wouldn't apply the second penalty