init m8 dunkno dats how we roll blud
nah shut up man you're the one selling your ferrari fucks sakes
nah shut up man you're the one selling your ferrari fucks sakes
Last edited by Mekstizzle (2010-06-25 03:46:37)
Just goes to show how strong those cars are. (where they need to be)ghettoperson wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJh6A-5CaOY
Last edited by menzo (2010-06-27 09:56:15)
yeh and therefor for he could build a big enough gap so it didnt impact his track positionMekstizzle wrote:
5 seconds is abit weird but there might be something to the rules we're not seeing that says they can do something like that if they want.
What Ferrari are complaining about is how it took so long for them to punish Hamilton and even when they did it was only a drive through. The combination of taking a long time + a weak drive through meant he pretty much got away with everything. But Drive through is probably standard for doing what he did. Some say he should have been black flagged for overtaking the safety car.
I think the main thing is why they took so long, there was no need to wait about 30 minutes to decide on whether Hamilton was right or wrong!
ManipeF1 wrote:
Feature: How the 2011 rear wing will work
There has been much commotion about the proposed 2011 moveable rear wing (MRW), with drivers and fans alike joining together to largely oppose its introduction. While fans are fearful the new wing will make overtaking too easy, drivers are worried about safety, with Mark Webber's enormous accident in Valencia last weekend once again highlighting the danger of excessive closing speeds. On Saturday in Valencia, Manipe F1 attended Williams technical director Sam Michael's media briefing to get the low-down on the 2011 rear wing and to find out exactly how it will work.
Put simply, the wing will enable drivers to overtake with greater ease by reducing drag and increasing straightline speed, much like the current F-duct. By only allowing chasing drivers to use it during the race, it ensures that, unlike the F-duct or KERS, only those who are looking to overtake will be able to benefit from it. The driver in front, who is already disadvantaged on the straights by not having a slipstream, will essentially be a sitting duck for any rival close enough.
In qualifying, there will be no restriction on the use of the MRW, it will be free to use whenever and wherever a driver chooses. It will therefore act as an F-duct, used whenever the driver is on full throttle to increase speed, before the wing returns to normal when the driver brakes. This will force teams to gear their cars with the MRW in mind, meaning they won't be reaching the 18,000 rev limiter when it is used during the race.
At the start of the race, the MRW will be disabled in its default position for the first two laps of the race. This is to stop pole position being a disadvantage, as otherwise the polesitter would be the only person not allowed to use the MRW on the first lap, a significant disadvantage. The MRW will also to be disabled for the first lap or two following a safety car period, for the same reason that the lead driver would be unfairly disadvantaged.
From lap three onwards, any driver who is one second or less behind a rival will be able to use the MRW. The time gap will be measured at various timing loops scattered around the track (not just the sector timing positions) and once the computer recognises that a chasing driver is within one second of a rival he will be given a notification on his steering wheel through the standard ECU that the MRW is available for use.
The MRW will only be activated upon the driver pressing a special button in his steering wheel, and the wing will stay in its low-drag position until the driver presses the brakes. The MRW will also return to default if the driver crosses another timing loop having already passed his rival on-track (at which time the overtaken driver will have the MRW available for use).
From a technical point of view, the MRW was proposed by the Formula One overtaking working group to give a chasing car 15km/h top speed advantage on the straight. This is similar to the top speed advantage drivers get when slipstreaming, so in combination with each other it should be more than enough to successfully pull off an overtaking manoeuvre on any long straight.
Rear wing regulations at present require there to be a minimum 10mm slot gap between the two main planes of the rear wing. The regulations governing the MRW will allow a maximum 50mm slot gap between the two main planes when the MRW is activated. However, unlike the moveable front wing that was unsuccessfully introduced in 2009 to improve overtaking, the MRW will have just two settings, 'on' (at 10mm slot gap or more) and 'off' (at 50mm slot gap or less).
If, as is feared, overtaking becomes too easy next season, it's likely that the wing will be changed, simply by reducing the maximum 50mm slot gap measurement. This will require just a small change to the operating mechanism, by reducing its range, whereas had the working group been shortsighted and needed to increase it to a greater slot gap to make overtaking easier, teams would have had to almost entirely redesign their control systems. It's therefore logical to aim for a larger than required slot gap and reduce it at a later stage if necessary.
Undoubtedly the MRW will be implemented with the tremendous safety standard we have grown to know in Formula One, but whether it will produce the desired effect or not is another matter entirely. Nevertheless, FOTA must be admired for attempting something new. The fans asked for more overtaking and it looks like they'll get just that.
http://www.manipef1.com/blog/articles/33/
Last edited by menzo (2010-07-11 06:36:49)