Cam wrote:Regarding Shumi's start incident - where he was pushed off the grid into the pits:
41.5 Cars may not enter the pit lane when the race is suspended. A penalty under Article 16.3(a) will be imposed on any driver who enters the pit lane or whose car is pushed from the grid to the pit lane after the race has been suspended.
Was he given a penalty of any kind?? I don't recall seeing one.
Ral wrote:Race wasn't suspended so I don't think that article applies.
And they had no choice as obviously he couldn't just turn the ignition key to start the car again. The fact that he had to wait for the whole field to go past the pit exit before he was allowed to leave, was probably penalty enough.
Dragonfly wrote:If I could I'd downvoted on this post.
. Instead of denigrating it, you might have helped by giving me the correct answer, then I might have given you a +1.
Cam wrote:
Ahh, so it falls under this?
38.11 If, after returning to the starting grid at the end of the formation lap a problem arises, the following procedures shall apply :
a) If a car develops a problem that could endanger the start the driver must immediately raise his hands above his head and the marshal responsible for that row must immediately wave a yellow flag. If the race director decides the start should be delayed the green lights will be illuminated two seconds after the abort lights are switched on, a board saying “EXTRA FORMATION LAP” will be displayed and all cars able to do so must complete a further formation lap whilst the car which developed the problem is moved into the pit lane.
raymondu999 wrote:Yep setup helps too, but I was talking more in terms of driving technique
n smikle wrote:Understeer is less sliding
Maybe Hamilton was purposely turning with larger radii
As for the scruffy lap, as Webber said in his RedBull video, the corners come at you very fast in Hungary and the track is littered with bumps, so a fast lap is going to look very scruffy, the complete opposite of a place like Spa.
raymondu999 wrote:n smikle wrote:Understeer is less sliding
less sliding - at the rear. But the fronts are sliding more.Maybe Hamilton was purposely turning with larger radii
Possibly - but then again I've also heard that these Pirellis like corners to be shorter - ie a late-apex line puts less thermal into them than the Jenson-type semicircular line.
Nando wrote:Also just realized RBR dominated the sector times in Hungary... Hamilton was nowhere except in the last sector but he was only 5th there i believe.
Bit odd i have to say..
Also noticed Button being close to the top in the speed trap but Hamilton was nowhere to be seen.
They must have been running vastly different setups on the cars.
raymondu999 wrote:Nando wrote:Also just realized RBR dominated the sector times in Hungary... Hamilton was nowhere except in the last sector but he was only 5th there i believe.
Bit odd i have to say..
Hamilton was quickest in S1 and S3, and 2nd quickest (to Grosjean) in S2 mate. The rb8's in comparison were 3rd, 4th, 7th (Vettel) and 5th, 15th, 2nd (Webber)Also noticed Button being close to the top in the speed trap but Hamilton was nowhere to be seen.
They must have been running vastly different setups on the cars.
Button did a 302.6kph, Hamilton did 302.3... That's not "vastly different?"
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