And yet again it points out that F1 is too much about aero and less about mechanical. Clearly Kimi's Ferrari was quicker than Verstappen's Red Bull, but once you are getting close enough, dirty air causes your car to lose aero grip, which is why Kimi always got close to Verstappen in sector 1 and 2, but when they go on the main straight, Kimi would be too far away. Barcelona isn't a circuit for great overtaking is it?f1316 wrote:Once the two Mercedes were gone, the Ferrari was by far the fastest car in the race - that's something, I suppose , but not winning the race from there (let alone getting a one-two which I was expecting) is not good enough.
Anyway, good race from verstappen -he won a race when three people behind were quicker and in many ways that's what the greats do.
I haven't heard anyone say that's the normal racing line. Rosberg already took a defensive line for the right hander ahead by staying mid track instead of opening the wheel and going to the outside out the track for a wider line since that turn is always on the edge of almost going flat out. And the wider line you can take the more speed you can carry. Since Lewis lost his place in T1 he set himself up for a better line going into T3 by going more to the left before the corner entry, hence the extra closing speed he had over ROS before he got into harvesting. The harvesting made the speed difference even bigger.Restomaniac wrote:Hi guys new user here.
Something struck me on the footage today.
When looking from the shot looking down the small straight just before turn 3 it's noticeable just how far over Rosberg actually is . No one else is anywhere near that far to the right even those trying/defending overtakes. At one point as Hamilton ends up being a passenger Rosberg is about 1 tyre width from being on the grass himself. Now if that's the normal line why is nobody else over there?
Also for those saying Hamilton should have backed out of it. Fine that's a valid point until you factor in just how slow Rosberg was going at that point. If Hamilton backed out and totally compromised himself he is running a real risk of a redbull steaming up within a corner or 2.
That would mean that Rosberg makes a mistake in engine mode and yet he gets a net gain of not only retaining his place but possibly costing his teammate second.
I guess we have to agree to disagree.Manoah2u wrote:There was an interesting point Hamilton raised.
Rosberg - accidentaly? - put his car in SAFETY CAR MODE, which was 180 HP down on normal mode. This meant Rosberg f*cked up and was 180hp down. Compared to that, Rosberg at that moment essentially was a Manor car of last year, just driving in front.
and this 'backmarker' if you will was busy on his steering wheel and cut off the must faster car behind him - which he clearly kwew was there, i mean come on, you dont even have to look in the mirror to KNOW lewis was right there and even which side he'd pass.
Rosberg was fully aware that Lewis was steaming in on him and just pushed him dirty off track and got the worst of it by getting collected himself. It was a dirty move and imho the blame is fully with Nico.
Although he doesn't want to admit in public, but in private they have concluded it was Nico's mistake. Case closed.Toto Wolff says a "wrong setting" on Nico Rosberg's Mercedes W07 was the catalyst for the collision between the German and teammate Lewis Hamilton on lap one of the Spanish Grand Prix.
According to Wolff, Rosberg was down on power as he exited Turn 3 in the lead, a warning light illuminating on the back of his car/
The slowdown allowed Hamilton to close in rapidly before Turn 4, where the two drivers' races ended at once.
"Nico was in the wrong setting - and that's why he lost power out of 3. He didn't have as much energy as Lewis had," Wolff said.
"I wouldn't say [Rosberg's to blame], but it explains why everything went so quickly - because there was such a discrepancy in speed that they needed to make a decision in a split/second.
"He had a setting on the steering wheel which should have been changed at the start - and he didn't."
Despite the issue of the setting, Wolff refused to apportion blame for the incident.
"Coming out of [Turn] 3, Nico closed up the inside in what looked to be a clean maneouvre, Lewis chose to go that side and was out on the grass and then lost the car.
"A racing incident, a very unfortunate racing incident, triggered by various circumstances.
"[Hamilton's] manoeuvre was fair enough even though the result was unfortunate. I think seeing that and going for it was what he should have done - and you can’t blame Nico for closing the door but the difference of speed triggered the incident."
wasnt mentioned by me because i saw about half of that move NBC cut to a commercial right at that exact momentZynerji wrote:What's sad, is that after reading over 30 pages about this race, is no one has even mentioned Vettel's overtake of Sainz at the beginning of the race. 3 move dummy? Epic!
You obviously have a very limited understanding of the rule regarding leaving space.Serbian4ever wrote:Clearly, Hamilton had more space on his left side to overtake...
http://s32.postimg.org/5i6pr0vud/Levo_Miksajlo.jpg
And of course everyone blames Rosberg but this isnt his fault at all. He blocked Hamilton properly
http://s32.postimg.org/8v38np7hx/6f79dc ... 3fd53e.jpg
Are you saying Nico was not alongside in the previous examples he posted?SectorOne wrote:You obviously have a very limited understanding of the rule regarding leaving space.Serbian4ever wrote:Clearly, Hamilton had more space on his left side to overtake...
http://s32.postimg.org/5i6pr0vud/Levo_Miksajlo.jpg
And of course everyone blames Rosberg but this isnt his fault at all. He blocked Hamilton properly
http://s32.postimg.org/8v38np7hx/6f79dc ... 3fd53e.jpg
If it makes you feel better...GPR-A wrote:Well, I am happy that Nico managed to stop his own run of victories.
Link - Here is what Toto says and what he could mean!Although he doesn't want to admit in public, but in private they have concluded it was Nico's mistake. Case closed.Toto Wolff says a "wrong setting" on Nico Rosberg's Mercedes W07 was the catalyst for the collision between the German and teammate Lewis Hamilton on lap one of the Spanish Grand Prix.
According to Wolff, Rosberg was down on power as he exited Turn 3 in the lead, a warning light illuminating on the back of his car/
The slowdown allowed Hamilton to close in rapidly before Turn 4, where the two drivers' races ended at once.
"Nico was in the wrong setting - and that's why he lost power out of 3. He didn't have as much energy as Lewis had," Wolff said.
"I wouldn't say [Rosberg's to blame], but it explains why everything went so quickly - because there was such a discrepancy in speed that they needed to make a decision in a split/second.
"He had a setting on the steering wheel which should have been changed at the start - and he didn't."
Despite the issue of the setting, Wolff refused to apportion blame for the incident.
"Coming out of [Turn] 3, Nico closed up the inside in what looked to be a clean maneouvre, Lewis chose to go that side and was out on the grass and then lost the car.
"A racing incident, a very unfortunate racing incident, triggered by various circumstances.
"[Hamilton's] manoeuvre was fair enough even though the result was unfortunate. I think seeing that and going for it was what he should have done - and you can’t blame Nico for closing the door but the difference of speed triggered the incident."
You are overreacting. What you fail to post is how lewis has done the moves you posted above. All of those moves were very smooth and predictable and according to the regulations. What he does is a steady sweeping towards the outside of the corner.Serbian4ever wrote:Clearly, Hamilton had more space on his left side to overtake...
http://s32.postimg.org/5i6pr0vud/Levo_Miksajlo.jpg
And of course everyone blames Rosberg but this isnt his fault at all. He blocked Hamilton properly
http://s32.postimg.org/8v38np7hx/6f79dc ... 3fd53e.jpg
Oh absolutely !!! It is still the same Nico from Monaco 2014.GrayGreat wrote:If it makes you feel better...GPR-A wrote:Well, I am happy that Nico managed to stop his own run of victories.
Link - Here is what Toto says and what he could mean!Although he doesn't want to admit in public, but in private they have concluded it was Nico's mistake. Case closed.Toto Wolff says a "wrong setting" on Nico Rosberg's Mercedes W07 was the catalyst for the collision between the German and teammate Lewis Hamilton on lap one of the Spanish Grand Prix.
According to Wolff, Rosberg was down on power as he exited Turn 3 in the lead, a warning light illuminating on the back of his car/
The slowdown allowed Hamilton to close in rapidly before Turn 4, where the two drivers' races ended at once.
"Nico was in the wrong setting - and that's why he lost power out of 3. He didn't have as much energy as Lewis had," Wolff said.
"I wouldn't say [Rosberg's to blame], but it explains why everything went so quickly - because there was such a discrepancy in speed that they needed to make a decision in a split/second.
"He had a setting on the steering wheel which should have been changed at the start - and he didn't."
Despite the issue of the setting, Wolff refused to apportion blame for the incident.
"Coming out of [Turn] 3, Nico closed up the inside in what looked to be a clean maneouvre, Lewis chose to go that side and was out on the grass and then lost the car.
"A racing incident, a very unfortunate racing incident, triggered by various circumstances.
"[Hamilton's] manoeuvre was fair enough even though the result was unfortunate. I think seeing that and going for it was what he should have done - and you can’t blame Nico for closing the door but the difference of speed triggered the incident."