Felipe 92 wrote:Ham set his fastest time in Q2 on that tyres with "an unsafe car". Driving "unsafe car" at racing speed in qualifying is OK, but driving it in race is a safety issue!?
I was unaware that the FIA had checked his tyres during Q2 as they did after Quali finished. Perhaps you could link their report from that Q2 check?
Felipe 92 wrote: Ham has flat spotted tyre which was good enough to get him through to Q3, Raikkonen had his front wing stuck underneath a car while the track was still wet, it`s not the same thing.
Unfortunately, the people with the actual information and the responsibility for defining the situation think that it is the same thing.
basti313 wrote:He could just go the usual way and start from the pits if it is that unsafe.
So everyone who makes a change in parc ferme due to safety has to start from the pits?
basti313 wrote:He was able to do two further laps and a great time in Q2 on this "unsafe" set of tires, so I see absolutely no reason for the change.
His ‘great time’ was a second down on his team mate and, whilst you may see no reason for the change, I’m not sure how much time you were able to spend with Hamilton’s tyres overnight to carry out your investigation. Perhaps you could enlighten us?
As a reminder, I don't recall Ricciardo having to start from the pit lane in Montreal? I can't find the Parc ferme report but he commented post-quali that Red Bull thought he had damaged his suspension on his flying lap and that "I’m sure the FIA will let us change parts if we need to if they look a bit worse for wear." I'm sure there were various outraged posts from people complaining that he wouldn't take additional penalties, start from the pitlane and that his Quali lap was unsafe, no?
As for the race, great drive from Rosberg, just untouchable. He’ll have been saving wear on all his components too. It’ll also be good for his confidence as it should reassert him as the fastest Merc driver this year. If he wins Austria I think this year is his to lose.
Great race for Perez too. He’s really refined his style over the past two years and I think he’s right up there at the moment. I just hope Force India can keep giving him a competitive package. Ideally, I'd like to see him in a Red Bull but, with those seats locked in (as much as they can be for Red Bull), it'd be great to see him in a Ferrari next year. It'd be a shame for FI to lose him though.
Good to see the driver being able to help dictate strategy for Ferrari too. Vettel made an excellent call and the pit wall backed him. It won't always be the case (given where the balance of information sit) but it's a positive sign for Ferrari.
I’ll be interested to find out what has happened to Red Bull and whether their tyre issues will continue to plague them going forward. Also disappointed in Gutierrez. There's only so often you can blame the car when you keep making mistakes like T1, lap one.