
Gotta hand it to Capt Morgan, he drove one helluva race. Still don't think the Ferrari is a true 3rd place car at the moment.
Moderators: Bill_Abner, ScoopBrady
Hmmm maybe they think it's too American to pass.pk500 wrote:Complaining about overtaking: Only in F1.
Jay-zus, we're not seeing NASCAR at Talladega or CART with the Handford Device at Michigan, with so many passes they become irrelevant. But we are seeing some fantastic racing so far in F1. I think the balance between artificial devices and ballsy, skilled driving is excellent this season.
News flash to the purists: Fans like to see overtaking. This is racing, not a technical exercise or a Sunday drive.
Did they, though? More so than in Malaysia, China or particularly Australia, the Turkish Grand Prix featured a DRS zone immediately after a key corner exit where traction is everything. I saw passes being completed into turn 11, the flat right hand kink in what I'd still call the back straight. The DRS zone only began on the entry to that turn.Smurfy wrote:DRS and KERS worked a bit too well in Turkey. As Martin Brundle pointed out, the cars are supposed to be side-by-side going into the braking zone, not blowing past each other.
In the spirit of "Weekend Update" on "Saturday Night Live," "JANE, YOU IGNORANT SLUT ... "Gurantsu wrote:I understand what you're getting at, and it was interesting to watch, but something about it just rubs me the wrong way. It's becoming less driver, more car, which back in the day seemed to be the other way around. I'm sure there are people who credit Buttons World Title to the technology, not his skill as a driver.
And the Magic Paddle. Brundle's follow-up when the camera cut to Barrichello, "Hit the Abracadabra Button, Rubens!" was among the highlights of my weekend. Which, on reflection, says a lot about my weekend.pk500 wrote:At least with these gimmicks, the drivers must manage more devices in the cockpit, such as the movable rear wing and KERS.
Could it not equally be, though, that back in the day we had teams who simply didn't have the time and resources to run two absolutely equal cars? In other words, that the car mattered exactly as much then as it does now, but that it's more apparent in a world of dedicated race engineers and groups of mechanics for each car? Lotus, for example, had such a track record for that kind of thing that it almost looks like a fluke when you see Mario and Ronnie near the top of the standings as a pair.Gurantsu wrote:I understand what you're getting at, and it was interesting to watch, but something about it just rubs me the wrong way. It's becoming less driver, more car, which back in the day seemed to be the other way around. I'm sure there are people who credit Buttons World Title to the technology, not his skill as a driver.
Very well said!toonarmy wrote:KERS is really not making a big difference except maybe on the starts. For the most part when one car begins using KERS the other one does as well, which cancels it out. Now DRS is whole different story. Perhaps on some courses with ultra-long straights F1 will have to revise the DRS zone because it is almost too effective. The tire wear this year is making for fun strategy. I hope F1 does not tinker too much with that aspect. Overall, let's be honest, quality is still winning out in the end. The new regulations simply make for more fun racing to watch. Racing should not be just about the car tech but also about strategy and driver skill. I think F1 is achieving a good balance, while still seeing the better cars at the top.
Only way for this to happen is to take a trip back to the '60s. Get rid of downforce, as wings are most certainly one of those gimmicks! And skinny tires too. Minimal mechanical and aero grip would certainly separate the wheat from the chaff.Gurantsu wrote:And F1 brings this on themselves. If they are the premier, elite motorsport with the finest drivers in the world as they claim to be, then turn off the gimmicks, and let them race.
But MotoGP suffers from the same kind of "wish they could race like they used to" syndrome that afflicts F1. The difference is that the good, old days in F1 were in the 1960s; the good, old days in MotoGP were in 2006, the last year of the 990cc formula.F308GTB wrote:I liken the passing now in F1 to motorcycle racing. It's been the reliance on downforce and the loss of aero grip (making the trailing car unstable) for the trailing car that has limited passing for the last several years. Moto racing doesn't have the same issue, and we see a fair amount of "slingshot" passes.
I forget the year and race but IIRC there's was a McLaren that was smoking and it was fixed from the pit wall. I thought that was insanely cool. Does anyone else remember this? My memory is fuzzy. I was thinking it was DC at the 2002 Monaco GP but not really sure?Gurantsu wrote:Do we really need to be controlling cars via computers from off track?
I was at work. For promotional purposes, I was also required to dress in a manner which drew the following comment (among many, it must be said):Rodster wrote:I forget the year and race but IIRC there's was a McLaren that was smoking and it was fixed from the pit wall. I thought that was insanely cool. Does anyone else remember this? My memory is fuzzy. I was thinking it was DC at the 2002 Monaco GP but not really sure?
Adam where are you? You would remember that.
Somehow I don't want to know anymoreGB_Simo wrote:"What happened? Did you walk into the shop and ask if they sold anything in 'f*ck me, that's pink'?"
Yeah, but the story in the program about the green future of racing and alternative energy sucked. The asshole who wrote that should be fired.toonarmy wrote:Got this year's Indy 500 program in the mail and it is a very nice package. It includes a Sports Illustrated 100th Anniversary edition of the Indy 500. Anyone who follows Indy Car should definitely pick one of these packages up.
What a jackass that guy is! Letting him in the program is a disgrace.pk500 wrote:Yeah, but the story in the program about the green future of racing and alternative energy sucked. The asshole who wrote that should be fired.toonarmy wrote:Got this year's Indy 500 program in the mail and it is a very nice package. It includes a Sports Illustrated 100th Anniversary edition of the Indy 500. Anyone who follows Indy Car should definitely pick one of these packages up.
toonarmy wrote:What a jackass that guy is! Letting him in the program is a disgrace.pk500 wrote:Yeah, but the story in the program about the green future of racing and alternative energy sucked. The asshole who wrote that should be fired.toonarmy wrote:Got this year's Indy 500 program in the mail and it is a very nice package. It includes a Sports Illustrated 100th Anniversary edition of the Indy 500. Anyone who follows Indy Car should definitely pick one of these packages up.