marcush. wrote:you are kidding guys ..these drivers are supposed to be the cream of the crop and you think a simple hint by a race engineer enables them to drive quicker brake later or whatever?
Driving at the limit has nothing to do with a brakepoint at 200m or 195 m it has to do with using the car to the max without overdriving it...trying too hard..Sure it is helpful to actually know just where the missing tenth might be missing but as the drivers rarely have the same setup and differ in driving style it seems impossible to me that rosberg or Hamilton cannot judge the limit of adhesion going into a corner and Tony Rooss or Bonnington can tell them how it´s done.It just does not work like this. A race engineer is not a driving instructor.
I very much agree with this. Yet at the same time, there must be a reason why race engineers do talk to their drivers and give them advice. I would think drivers are well used to analyzing their track performance - seing them and their team-mates lap performance overlayed on a simple graph that shows speed, throttle, brakes and gear shifts to see where they are losing or gaining time relative to their team-mate. If an engineer tells me that I am losing time in corner X by braking too early, it tells me that perhaps the quicker way round the corner is later braking point and a later apex. At the end of the day, it's probably all just a tenth here and there, amounting to a bigger or smaller advantage.
The drivers obviously can't look at these graphs while in the race, but if an engineer can tell them exactly where the team-mate is gaining, i do think this information can be quite beneficial.
I do think it's great though that the FIA is looking ways to eliminate these messages. If I was in charge, I'd probably ban team-radio for good - that would make team-orders a lot more difficult to enforce by the team and any messages (like pit-window) would have to be communicated either by an LED on the dash or the old traditional way using a pit-board. Less radio communication == driver becomes a bigger factor. I'm all for it.