Ok, well when I go online for gt5p (if I ever do) I'll make sure to push the other guy to the edge of the track. 👍
I only caught the end of the race...
Ok, well when I go online for gt5p (if I ever do) I'll make sure to push the other guy to the edge of the track. 👍
"In order to become Energy Star compliant, he selected 5th gear instead of second for better fuel economy."Stupid me here thinking that team orders were forbidden, and that McLaren lets the drivers battle for the positions.
"In order to become Energy Star compliant, he selected 5th gear instead of second for better fuel economy."
"He flicked the ignition switch to make sure it was working. Can't be too cautious."
"We wanted him to quantify brake pedal pressure by pressing both feet on it."
"His car was to become underweight, so we asked him to pick up some marbles on the side of the track."
Also, if a driver finishes the race, and crashes out or breaks down on the cooldown lap into the pits - what happens to him? Punished for not making it into the checks? Declared underweight because he couldn't be verified?
I can't imagine it's more than a kilogram; rubber is not very dense. I suppose the grooved tires pick up a bit more than slick tires could. Supposedly Alain Prost's car was short by 2kg (just under 540kg) after winning the 1985 San Marino GP; he ran out of fuel on the slow-down lap, which may have cost him that precious weight. The engine also consumed a little too much oil.Just because you brought it up - I never understood the "picking up marbles". Is the weight of that bit of rubber that sticks to your tyres really that substantial? More than a kilo? I know it's a joke in this case, but sometimes they do mention it on the radio after the race..
They have to pick up the car eventually to return it, and I think all finishers are checked for basic dimensions. Any car/driver/team that suddenly has a giant-killing performance, or dominates a little abnormally is probably disassembled as much as possible.MetarAlso, if a driver finishes the race, and crashes out or breaks down on the cooldown lap into the pits - what happens to him? Punished for not making it into the checks? Declared underweight because he couldn't be verified?
But you gotta draw the line somewhere.2kgs short - was he disqualified? That's one small margin...
"We need to understand why we were slower in Germany as never before this year."
formula1.com(currently 600kg including driver, except during qualifying when it is 605kg).
I thought all liquids (fuel, oil, water) were drained after the race before the cars being weighed, so running out of fuel or burning oil shouldn't matter in that case.
I'd assume, if they're already counting the driver as part of the car, why wouldn't they count the oils?
But you gotta draw the line somewhere.
I think the marbles matter is literally a matter of "every little helps". the cars are made to be as close to the weight limit as possible, but if something falls off, extra wear on the board, tyres wear down too low etc. Too many variables in such a tightly rules competition.
AutosportWebber says safety car rules 'a joke'
By Jonathan Noble Tuesday, July 22nd 2008, 09:22 GMT
Mark Webber believes that Nelson Piquet's second place in the German Grand Prix provides further evidence that Formula One's safety car rules are 'a joke'.
The Red Bull Racing driver says that the way Piquet lucked into the best result of his F1 career almost makes a mockery of the sport, and hopes that it acts as a spur for teams and the FIA to make changes to the regulations that they have been mulling over for several weeks.
"The safety car threw up a bizarre result and I think the rules are a joke," Webber wrote in his column for the BBC.
"I was happy for Renault's Nelson Piquet that he finished second, given the start to the season he has had, but F1 is more professional and better than the rules we have for the safety car at the moment.
"It looks very amateurish when the guy who nearly wins the race starts 17th and only overtakes one car, Kazuki Nakajima's Williams, because he spun. For me, that is not what Formula One is all about.
"Nelson would be the first to agree that it was not a fully deserved second place. None of the drivers like the current system - we don't like to get flukey results.
"The teams and the FIA are trying to find a better way with the safety car but they are making heavy weather of it."