added tyre info:
Lap chart
S = Soft compound
SS = Super Soft compound
W = Wet tyre
I = Intermediate tyre
N = New compound
U = Used compound
DT = Drive through
There's no god given right to hold the racing line if another car is there. The rules are explicit, you cannot run another car off the road, and make no mention of racing lines.HampusA wrote:Button was 100% on the racing line. What some people forget is that it´s drizzling down and the corner turns right. So you position yourself almost as far to the left as possible to do the least amount of steering and get as straight of a braking zone as possible.
Hamilton has a two pairs of brakes which he should have used.
He shouldn't have played it safe. He should have played it smart. And patient.myurr wrote: Yes Hamilton could have played it safe, but playing it safe against a dominant Red Bull isn't going to win him the championship any more than crashing out is.
Lucky or scared?zeph wrote:Hamilton should consider himself lucky to have fans as devoted as Ringo and Myurr.
But that's not good enough Zeph. It is a question of pride on here. Ultimately, they will arrive at the same conclusion as Hamilton after a bit more hyperbole.zeph wrote:Sheez, even he himself admitted it was an error of judgement. It happens. Does not mean he is not great.
Did he? I don't recall anyhting being mentioned in the coverage but it is not uncommon for things to be missed on the terrible BBC commentary.myurr wrote:One thing that I don't think has been picked up on is that Vettel set his best middle sector time of the entire race under waved yellow flags, whereas Button backed off by a couple of tenths. Given that other drivers have been given a drive through for this, should Vettel have been investigated and reprimanded, or even given a penalty? Why is Vettel's situation different?
It thought it was in sector one.andrew wrote:Did he? I don't recall anyhting being mentioned in the coverage but it is not uncommon for things to be missed on the terrible BBC commentary.myurr wrote:One thing that I don't think has been picked up on is that Vettel set his best middle sector time of the entire race under waved yellow flags, whereas Button backed off by a couple of tenths. Given that other drivers have been given a drive through for this, should Vettel have been investigated and reprimanded, or even given a penalty? Why is Vettel's situation different?
Was the yellow flag in the middle sector?
Yup, it was for Nick Heidfelds crash just after the bridge which is in the middle of sector 2.andrew wrote:Did he? I don't recall anyhting being mentioned in the coverage but it is not uncommon for things to be missed on the terrible BBC commentary.myurr wrote:One thing that I don't think has been picked up on is that Vettel set his best middle sector time of the entire race under waved yellow flags, whereas Button backed off by a couple of tenths. Given that other drivers have been given a drive through for this, should Vettel have been investigated and reprimanded, or even given a penalty? Why is Vettel's situation different?
Was the yellow flag in the middle sector?
Diesel wrote: Pirelli might as well not bother manufacturing extreme wets.
GoodYear and Michelin had them, they lifted around 120 litres of water into the air, however Bridgestone didn't want to carry them and Pirelli have followed. The Monsoons had 2mm more tread depth than the wets and raised the car by that amount as well. Teams, if i remember rightly, were given one set of these per weekend per car, and the Monsoons lasted about 700km to 750km. In event of there being a monsoon weekend that was enough for Friday Practice 1&2, Saturday Practice1&2, Quali and the race at the time as drivers usually did 9 to 12 laps of Friday practice and about 25 to 28 laps of saturday practice, as well as being limited to 12 laps in Quali at the time. Not to mention the fact that In Season Testing was rife then.gridwalker wrote:I am pretty sure that I remember a time (many years ago) when F1 cars were provided with an extra-deeply treaded tyre, which the commentators referred to as the Monsoon tyre ... whatever happened to those? Surely such a tyre would have made sense this weekend.
There wasn´t another car there.myurr wrote:There's no god given right to hold the racing line if another car is there. The rules are explicit, you cannot run another car off the road, and make no mention of racing lines.