bhallg2k wrote:I presume nothing. I stated my interpretation of the rule as it's written and presented it for discussion. This is what adults do when there's a disagreement about the intended meaning of something. It's why Charlie Whiting has a job.
You, on the other hand, presume that we're in a fantasy land where your whims should dictate the actions of others.
You are, of course, free to disqualify whatever you wish from me or from anyone else. But, please know that such actions demonstrate nothing but ignorance and an inability to think beyond the narrow constraints of your mind.
Never had scotch on the rocks then?Raptor22 wrote: I've never seen a solid manufactured from a liquid unless its natural state is a solid. polymeric reactions excluded of course.
I never drink real scotch "on the rocks". A dash of water to release the flavour is alls thats requiredGridlock wrote:Never had scotch on the rocks then?Raptor22 wrote: I've never seen a solid manufactured from a liquid unless its natural state is a solid. polymeric reactions excluded of course.
I posted a good list of reasons why any team wouldn't want mercury anywhere near their mechanics or drivers about 5 pages back, the same is true of any material that would accomplish what is needed here as far as I can work out. You just can't get enough force without carrying a massive weight/CoG penalty without resorting to very exotic, very dangerous substances.
But then a) I'm no chemist and b) none of us have read the Technical Directives or asked Charlie.
My comments weren't at all directed toward you. I think you've been great throughout this thread.ForMuLaOne wrote:You`re not participating either, as your questions have been answered in this thread. My ambition would be to win your attention on what has been written by people like Raptor for example.
Straight all the way! I'm much more a bourbon fan but I do like Scotch from time to time.Raptor22 wrote:I never drink real scotch "on the rocks". A dash of water to release the flavour is alls thats required![]()
After this debate I'm opening my bottled in 1988 Ben Riach
avatar wrote:just to add another dimension to this discussion;
does this put anyone else in mind of the "swing-in lock" mechanism that was used to reduce /stop body roll under lateral g-force load during cornering?
(obviously the system being discussed on this thread is hydraulic and longitudinal, but running on similar principals)
anyone know under what ruling that was banned and whether it would apply to a hydraulic system with a what seems to me to have the same goal and is triggered in the same way?
(whether the system is acting laterally for anti roll, or longitudinally for anti dive)
and?Federico wrote: this is a video that shows mercury vaporization at room temperature. You don't want to breathe that