Apart from the pitlane entry bit, what difference is this compared to Massa/Hamilton in Singapore?
I don´t remember much from the Singapore incident other then the fact that Hamilton overtook outside the track limits and had to give the place up.
Next time you ramp onto the freeway and get side by side another car see what your natural response is.Phil wrote:...SectorOne wrote:Alonso is the one that´s entering the racetrack, he´s the one that should be cautious.
I still think the FIA's decision was wrong. Alonso entered the track and he put himself in the position of being squeezed from the track. Verge was driving his line and speed and was ever so slightly in front of Alonso. He was always going to drift to the outerside of the track and push Alonso wide. Alonso had to see that coming and decided regardless to keep the foot down and leave the track to complete the pass. If you go by consistency, the stewards should have penalized this IMO.
Looking at the bigger picture though - if you make passing each other more easy, I think drivers will start showing more respect again (or less hot-headedness) as there will be less reason to go full-out on the few rare attempts there are too pass someone.
They changed the rules and drivers advice since then.SectorOne wrote:Apart from the pitlane entry bit, what difference is this compared to Massa/Hamilton in Singapore?
I don´t remember much from the Singapore incident other then the fact that Hamilton overtook outside the track limits and had to give the place up.
Hobbs04 wrote:Phil wrote:...SectorOne wrote:Alonso is the one that´s entering the racetrack, he´s the one that should be cautious.
I still think the FIA's decision was wrong. Alonso entered the track and he put himself in the position of being squeezed from the track. Verge was driving his line and speed and was ever so slightly in front of Alonso. He was always going to drift to the outerside of the track and push Alonso wide. Alonso had to see that coming and decided regardless to keep the foot down and leave the track to complete the pass. If you go by consistency, the stewards should have penalized this IMO.
Looking at the bigger picture though - if you make passing each other more easy, I think drivers will start showing more respect again (or less hot-headedness) as there will be less reason to go full-out on the few rare attempts there are too pass someone.
Agree... Luckily for Alonso he was also driving a red car! (I didnt say that did I?).
Next time you ramp onto the freeway and get side by side another car see what your natural response is.
Ol' Alonso knew if he got in front of STR's back tire he could push regardless if STR pushed him wide. I agree with the fact Alonso is the one entering and should be cautious and had there been a crash he would probably be facing a grid penalty in Austin, but he didn't.
Hamilton was run out wide over the T5 rumblestrips and thus 'off track' but kept momentum and then dove up the inside of Massa into T6, thus was deemed to have gained an advantage by going wide and told to give the place back.SectorOne wrote:Apart from the pitlane entry bit, what difference is this compared to Massa/Hamilton in Singapore?
I don´t remember much from the Singapore incident other then the fact that Hamilton overtook outside the track limits and had to give the place up.
Oh, I'm not questioning Alonso's natural response. I was more criticising the lack of consistency from the stewards. I have no problem with either decision, but IMO they should be enforced consistently, not only within a singular race, but across the season too.Hobbs04 wrote:Next time you ramp onto the freeway and get side by side another car see what your natural response is.
Do you people realize that JEV himself said Alonso prevented a big crash and he thought that Alonso didn't deserve a penalty. Sometimes it amazes me how people will let their agenda blind them to facts.(I will admit though, I'm often as guilty as anyone)jknights wrote:Hobbs04 wrote:Agree... Luckily for Alonso he was also driving a red car! (I didnt say that did I?).Phil wrote: ...
I still think the FIA's decision was wrong. Alonso entered the track and he put himself in the position of being squeezed from the track. Verge was driving his line and speed and was ever so slightly in front of Alonso. He was always going to drift to the outerside of the track and push Alonso wide. Alonso had to see that coming and decided regardless to keep the foot down and leave the track to complete the pass. If you go by consistency, the stewards should have penalized this IMO.
Looking at the bigger picture though - if you make passing each other more easy, I think drivers will start showing more respect again (or less hot-headedness) as there will be less reason to go full-out on the few rare attempts there are too pass someone.
Next time you ramp onto the freeway and get side by side another car see what your natural response is.
Ol' Alonso knew if he got in front of STR's back tire he could push regardless if STR pushed him wide. I agree with the fact Alonso is the one entering and should be cautious and had there been a crash he would probably be facing a grid penalty in Austin, but he didn't.
The track already has the option for that. It seems like a no brainer. I totally agree that they should go from the high speed sweepers straight into the hairpin, bypassing the fiddly chicane.raymondu999 wrote:They should make the cars filter through turn 4 straight to turn 7 in my personal opinion. Bypass T6.
Since when does Vergne write the rulebook on track limits? Since when?Pierce89 wrote:Do you people realize that JEV himself said Alonso prevented a big crash and he thought that Alonso didn't deserve a penalty. Sometimes it amazes me how people will let their agenda blind them to facts.
The Problem with that is that Alonso finally prevented a crash that wouldn't have been incipient in the first place, had he just backed off a little bit while he was still behind Vergne. That is the Problem I have with the maneuver.Pierce89 wrote: Do you people realize that JEV himself said Alonso prevented a big crash and he thought that Alonso didn't deserve a penalty.
No, I absolutely don't have an axe to grind with Alonso. He is for sure one of the very best of the current F1 Drivers.Sometimes it amazes me how people will let their agenda blind them to facts
So where are the new overtaking possibilities in this proposal ? Just curious.WilliamsF1 wrote:Not necessary to bypass that architectural master piece, they just need to round the corners in that area.Jonnycraig wrote:There are plenty of ways to spice up the racing. They all just require the annexing of the Viceroy hotel section.raymondu999 wrote:They should make the cars filter through turn 4 straight to turn 7 in my personal opinion. Bypass T6.
http://i1267.photobucket.com/albums/jj5 ... a522eb.jpg
Turn 5 and 6 brought to immediately after turn 4
Turn 7 brought back to satisfy FIA safety norms without affecting safety norms
Long boring straight broken
Turns 8 and 9 made shorter to depict della roggia chicane at monza
Turn 14 rounded
Turn 16 and 17 combined and rounded
Turn 18 Rounded
Turn 19 and 20 combined and rounded
While he did not really increase the radius of the pit lane exit corner significantly, he increased the radius of the subsequent opposite turn (to the extent it effectively became a straight line) and more importantly short-cut the latter.hollus wrote: Was Alonso in a corner (for his trajectory)? Did he increase the radius of any corner or gain an acceleration zone by going off the track?
I agree, in fact i brought up the very same point. It IMO just underlines my point that Alonso had the option to lift safely, while Vergne was inside the right hand corner and comitted to the corner when Alonso entered the closing gap. When you are already at the limit of your grip, it's a lot harder to make changes to your direction or simply 'leave enough room'. Therefore, and because Alonso was entering the track, my conclusion is that if someone was to blame, it would be Alonso.hollus wrote:Was Alonso in a corner (for his trajectory)? Did he increase the radius of any corner or gain an acceleration zone by going off the track?
Paradoxically, while Alonso (arguably) was not in a corner, Vergne, trying to occupy the same piece of tarmac, clearly was negotiating a corner.