I think Oscar was out of track limits tbh, but do you realize your white line is wrong on this mspaint masterpiece?venkyhere wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 20:00I dont know why people in this thread are doubting or why the protest fiasco by Mclaren is happening, if the excuse is "image is not conclusive". There might be other reasons why McLaren is protesting.Luscion wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 19:21What got his lap time deleted
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GRQHIUEWAAE ... me=900x900
Because clearly, any human with IQ around 100 or any basic AI bot with image processing ability, should be able to spot that track limit is clearly breached.
https://i.imgur.com/ym80L0I.png
My reading of it is that yes, the paperwork wasn't filed correctly, but it also says "A decision of the Stewards is not open to protest"mwillems wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 21:52
Am I reading this right? It's not admissible because they didn't fill the paperwork out correctly?
it failed because it was addressed to the wrong person, didn't quote the regulation and didn't specify against whom it was lodged.
It didn't even get to the idea of discussing whether the footage was suitable.
Yea the lawyers at Mercedes and Red Bull will be LOLing themselves crazy.
This time they (FIA) didn't do anything wrong. McLaren wanted to file a protest basically shooting into the dark and hoping to catch something to demand more proof from the FIA.CjC wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:11Wow, just wow.
Humiliating for Mclaren to balls that up so badly.
Basically due to an administration error the FIA have pied it off.
Humiliating for the FIA too, especially after last week when they confirmed it was ok to use your 200mph+ vehicle as a weapon of intent to damage or injure another.
Bravo FIA, Bravo.
No the FIA didn’t but to pie it off for such a *hit thing is frustrating.Emag wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:17This time they (FIA) didn't do anything wrong. McLaren wanted to file a protest basically shooting into the dark and hoping to catch something to demand more proof from the FIA.CjC wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:11Wow, just wow.
Humiliating for Mclaren to balls that up so badly.
Basically due to an administration error the FIA have pied it off.
Humiliating for the FIA too, especially after last week when they confirmed it was ok to use your 200mph+ vehicle as a weapon of intent to damage or injure another.
Bravo FIA, Bravo.
It was a desperate attempt anyway, they have sensors for these types of things and it gets flagged automatically. Can't remember the last time there was a false flag for track limits in modern era.
It does look bad on McLaren though for trying to get something out of nothing and not even following the procedure right.
They don't have sensors for track limits, I'm sure.Emag wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:17This time they (FIA) didn't do anything wrong. McLaren wanted to file a protest basically shooting into the dark and hoping to catch something to demand more proof from the FIA.CjC wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:11Wow, just wow.
Humiliating for Mclaren to balls that up so badly.
Basically due to an administration error the FIA have pied it off.
Humiliating for the FIA too, especially after last week when they confirmed it was ok to use your 200mph+ vehicle as a weapon of intent to damage or injure another.
Bravo FIA, Bravo.
It was a desperate attempt anyway, they have sensors for these types of things and it gets flagged automatically. Can't remember the last time there was a false flag for track limits in modern era.
It does look bad on McLaren though for trying to get something out of nothing and not even following the procedure right.
It’s so ridiculous it should be laughable.mwillems wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:46They don't have sensors for track limits, I'm sure.Emag wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:17This time they (FIA) didn't do anything wrong. McLaren wanted to file a protest basically shooting into the dark and hoping to catch something to demand more proof from the FIA.CjC wrote: ↑29 Jun 2024, 22:11Wow, just wow.
Humiliating for Mclaren to balls that up so badly.
Basically due to an administration error the FIA have pied it off.
Humiliating for the FIA too, especially after last week when they confirmed it was ok to use your 200mph+ vehicle as a weapon of intent to damage or injure another.
Bravo FIA, Bravo.
It was a desperate attempt anyway, they have sensors for these types of things and it gets flagged automatically. Can't remember the last time there was a false flag for track limits in modern era.
It does look bad on McLaren though for trying to get something out of nothing and not even following the procedure right.