
Well said.deluge wrote:Marshals can move cars from a dangerous position, this is true. But, that means dangerous to the competitors on track, as well as the stranded driver on-track, i.e. MS stuck with half of his car on the tarmac and half in the gravel with the engine running and tires spinning. A simple push, the car is away, the obstruction is cleared, and the marshals retreat.
If Lewis was in a dangerous position, it was only because he didn't exit the car like the other 5 drivers did. No one on track was threatened by Lewis, and if so, they were also threatened by the other 5 stranded cars.
So, to make things less dangerous, let's move a heavy piece of recovery equipment in, lift a car and driver, a car with the engine running, a car with about 15 laps of fuel in the tanks, and then move toward the danger of approaching cars, and deposit said driver and car on the tarmac to continue racing.
This has to be the most dangerous option available to marshals, other competitors and race control. And, it is unprecidented.
I checked the gap chart and Massa pulled away from Alonso after their stop for dry tyres on lap 12.FLC wrote:If Massa is so useless in the rain, how come he managed to pull away from Alonso in the first stint, before they switched to dry tires?
It was more dangerous him sitting in the car. He was putting his health and the marshalls at risk by sitting in his car. He should have been DQ'd for making a dangerous situation more than twice as bad. If I was the guy in the tractor I would have just put him behind the tyre wall. If it wasn't for Hamilton waiting in the car then Liuzzi wouldn't have been so close to pileing ino the tractor, so he put other drivers lives at risk as well.Rob W wrote:His car almost got hit by a Spyker sliding off and four other cars went off there also - if that isn't in the dangerous category I don't know what it.naknak_56 wrote:Sorry but I cant see how his position was dangerous , he was in the gravel trap!
Rob W
Exactly. All the teams could change the chassis, if they wanted to. There's no rule against it as long as the engine stays.vyselegend wrote:There's nothing wrong with changing chassis, as far as I know.![]()
You just have to keep the two-races engine for two races, but there isn't two-races chassis rule...
That one is more discutable, because the lolipop man has to ensure everithing is safe before releasing the car. If Alonso had hit the other car, he would have been given a drive-through penality! So that was risky.pRo wrote:
And what was so dangerous about letting Alonso go? The pitlane is wide enough for two cars and I didn't see any real danger there.
Hamilton did have to use a different chassis after the accident. The mechanics had to transfer his engine (unharmed) into the empty spare tub. And that is why he didn't recieve a penalty for doing so, he didn't change engine, just chassis.waynes wrote:they changed the chassis? i dont think soSpyker MF1 wrote:For changing chassis
and they would have had to start from pitlane if they changed the engine as fat as im aware
If Fisi hadn't moved right to the wall they would have hit and even though he dd that Honda had t make a complaint as their mechanics were nearly hit. If Fisi hadn't of moved I wouldn't be surprised if it had killed a mechanic or two.pRo wrote: And what was so dangerous about letting Alonso go? The pitlane is wide enough for two cars and I didn't see any real danger there. I suppose you have to be anti-McLaren to make all those claims.
What's so childish about it?jddh1 wrote:This is Ron Dennis asking Alonso to spray Schumi during the celebrations. Childish if you ask me.
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=O-s0ixVjTPQ&NR=1