Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Nov 2021, 19:42
Dee wrote: ↑11 Nov 2021, 19:32
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Nov 2021, 19:23
If the only discussion allowed is to agree with the OP, then the thread should be locked. A thread where discussion is not allowed is pointless and rather contrary to the whole point of a forum.
Not wanting to start a new thread about what you want/feel this thread should be about is not anyone else's problem but your own.
What is there to disagree with about OP? The data is doing the talking here, you can discuss/analyse that data all you want.
We're trying to discuss the data but being thrown back at every turn. Data alone means nothing. It requires context. To "discuss the data" just means we can all just sit here and say "yes, the data is there and it's good data". That's it. Anything you say about it from there on is inference. And inference is governed by context such as personal opinions, biases (we all have them because we're imperfect humans), heck even cultural differences.
I take it that some of the commentators on here have never done any serious work. Anyone who has done a Master's Degree or PhD will know that data is just a small part of any piece of work. There is a whole raft of other stuff - why you've complied the data (the reason for your research), how you compiled the data, looking at other work (that's part of the context), analysis of the data achieved and checking it for soundness and then, finally, discussion of the data and attempting to find some meaning in it - and finding meaning requires reference to other sources and expertise amongst other things i.e. putting it in context.
So just saying "discuss the data" is meaningless.
Example
2020
Analysis
Data given and sound method used
Discussion
How many poles for driver that is 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5 off in Qualy?
How many wins for driver that is 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.4 off in race pace?
Conclusion
Trends show that driver with 0.2 off the pace in Q would still/not get a pole/ x amount of poles etc
Trends show that driver with 0.4 off in race pace would still win X amount of races etc
This is not rocket science, this is analysis of data. We are on F1 technical.
You can come to some sort of conscenious at the end of it, you don't need reference to any outside data/context for this thread.