The rule does not specifically mentions a gap requirement to the outside. The way it is written you must also leave a one car wide gap to the inside, and that is the much more likely overtaking scenario. In the future you cannot close the door on a driver if you have left the racing line between the last corner and the one you are negotiating now. It is also important to note that there is no requirement where the overtaking driver is in terms of being behind or ahead. If there is a collision following a defensive move the onus is on the defending driver to leave a wide enough gap between his car and the edge of the track. If he does not do this he will end in front of the stewards for causing an avoidable collision. The only situation the attacking driver will be blamed is when the gap was actually a car wide and they collided because the attacker did not use the space properly.beelsebob wrote:Okay, so the rule has been clarified that you can move back... just you must leave a 1 car width gap for someone to go down your outside.
That seems more reasonable to me, it means that people can't shut off a move down the outside, but they can get (nearly) the correct entry to the corner.
How about Hamilton defending in Korea last year against Alonso last year. Yea 1 Time Nobody who gets eaten by Button in his prime & who will be Button's No.2 from now on is the ideal driver to learn defending.ringo wrote:The rule is not terrible.
In fact it doesn't even sound like it's new. It's basically a clarification on what was already implied by the previous rules.
I was saying this all the time, and i was thought to be a fan boy for making up stuff to suit a specific driver.
Now drivers have think more when they defend. Now they have to make their car wide by choosing a single line.
That is what true defending is about. Check Hamilton defending Vettel in Germany.
Or defending Webber in Korea.
Shumacher's moves are cheap and require no real skill to pull off.
Defending is not over guys, it just got a little bit more harder.
But fret not. I don't think overtaking is going to be much easier with this rule.
The attacker still has to get pass and be in a position to enter and exit the upcoming turn faster than the defender.
In fact i don't think it will change the racing much. Remember most passess nowadays are with big speed differentials, meaning they happen on the straights long before the braking zone. It is only in a case like shumacher/hamilton where overtaking is being attempted in the braking zone.
Which Hamilton - Massa incident are we discussing:Dragonfly wrote:Wasn't it the same until now if there is a car alongside? Although not officially put on paper. It seems to me Hamilton - Koba and Hamilton - Massa incidents lie beneath this rule. In both cases Ham neglected the presence of another car alongside.
You somehow missed the one I had in mind. IIRC (pardon if my memory fails) - Korea, Lewis slowly drifting left to outer edge (like at Spa) this time Massa being alongside. After that I remember some people put under question Hamilton's left side peripheral sight.beelsebob wrote: Which Hamilton - Massa incident are we discussing:
• Monaco - this rule doesn't really apply, Massa moved once.
• Silverstone - Doesn't apply, Hamilton moved once.
• Japan - Would apply, and be deemed to be Hamilton's fault if the collision had been serious enough for anyone to give a crap.
• India - Would apply, and be deemed to be Massa's fault for moving off the racing line, back on, and then back off.
I don't remember it, nor does YouTube seem to, are you sure you're not referring to Japan?Dragonfly wrote:You somehow missed the one I had in mind. IIRC (pardon if my memory fails) - Korea, Lewis slowly drifting left to outer edge (like at Spa) this time Massa being alongside. After that I remember some people put under question Hamilton's left side peripheral sight.beelsebob wrote: Which Hamilton - Massa incident are we discussing:
• Monaco - this rule doesn't really apply, Massa moved once.
• Silverstone - Doesn't apply, Hamilton moved once.
• Japan - Would apply, and be deemed to be Hamilton's fault if the collision had been serious enough for anyone to give a crap.
• India - Would apply, and be deemed to be Massa's fault for moving off the racing line, back on, and then back off.
I'm pretty sure what you're referring to is Japan last year where Hamilton squeezed Massa over at the entry to the chicane and knocked a small bit of front wing off. As far as I can tell the new rule would penalise Hamilton, not even for the collision, but for moving twice, once to defend the inside, and again to get back to the racing line on the entrance.Dragonfly wrote:As I pointed out, I am not sure which race. But I am sure the incident took place and the stewards explained not handing a penalty with Hamilton aiming to get back to the racing line. Which by itself is a bright example of inconsistency in stewarding.
Reading the wording of the new rule, even after the clarification, it seems still too moot to be a solid rule rather than an instrument in the hands of the FIA to stage and direct the championship.
Like they can host it with the FOM breathing down their neckI don't remember it, nor does YouTube seem to, are you sure you're not referring to Japan?
They absolutely can, all it takes is a few minor tweaks to the video (commonly flipping it horizontally). Search for pretty much any crash on youtube and you'll find a video up there.strad wrote:Like they can host it with the FOM breathing down their neckI don't remember it, nor does YouTube seem to, are you sure you're not referring to Japan?
I think you would have a problem with the stewards. The official racing line is actually painted in white in the track plan FiA issues.Just_a_fan wrote:After all, the racing line is a preference, not a requirement...