
Jesus, whoever wrote those nose rules needed shot. There is a whole year of racing for which we can never look at a picture again.

Nah, some cars saved the season. Not all were uglyhorse wrote:Can't wait to see this again (sarc mark, sarc mark):
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... d_Prix.jpg
Jesus, whoever wrote those nose rules needed shot. There is a whole year of racing for which we can never look at a picture again.
The Red Bull nose was as ugly as the others, they just had the good sense to paint it blackME4ME wrote:Nah, some cars saved the season. Not all were uglyhorse wrote:Can't wait to see this again (sarc mark, sarc mark):
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... d_Prix.jpg
Jesus, whoever wrote those nose rules needed shot. There is a whole year of racing for which we can never look at a picture again.
![]()
http://www.wallpaperup.com/uploads/wall ... 7cbbcf.jpg
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/qLVemAvFomc/hqdefault.jpg
I think KMag has less experience than Maldonado with these new regs but he has experience in a big team, and that may be what Renault needs to rebuild itself into a front runner. There aren't any other available big-team drivers out there.horse wrote:It seems to me that Renault want an experienced driver next to Palmer, rather than two rookies, but the list is short for the V6 era. Who have we got:
* K-Mag
* JEV
* Sutil
* Kobayashi
So, it's hardly a rich landscape. I think Sutil may have had his day, and it would be fun to see Kobayashi back in F1, but I understand them choosing a younger driver. Between K-Mag and JEV, well, K-Mag is a free agent I guess.
With K-Mag, it was precisely because he lacked experience that he was dropped. To memory, he was fast but had continuous issues with set up. If we are going to be harsh, we could compare him to Verstappen/Sainz or even Hamilton in their first seasons.PlatinumZealot wrote: I think KMag has less experience than Maldonado with these new regs but he has experience in a big team, and that may be what Renault needs to rebuild itself into a front runner. There aren't any other available big-team drivers out there.
So he had the speed but had to relearn how to race in a formula where race pace come down to saving fuel and tiresFoxHound wrote:With K-Mag, it was precisely because he lacked experience that he was dropped. To memory, he was fast but had continuous issues with set up. If we are going to be harsh, we could compare him to Verstappen/Sainz or even Hamilton in their first seasons.PlatinumZealot wrote: I think KMag has less experience than Maldonado with these new regs but he has experience in a big team, and that may be what Renault needs to rebuild itself into a front runner. There aren't any other available big-team drivers out there.
It seemed at the time that Magnussen was focusing his efforts in qualifying, to the detriment of his race pace. This imbalance continued throughout 2014, which when you look at the cold hard statistics, tells it's own story.
He outqualified Button 10 to 9, but was outscored 55/126.
That extra pace in qualifying could not be translated into race pace, and this was a problem to a seasoned team like McLaren. One can only hope it was a specific problem, or we could see more of the same this year.
My eyes deceived me on my phone! Thank you for the correction.ME4ME wrote:Actually Button beat him 10 to 9. Overall Magnussen was 0.165 s quicker in qualifying though.
Also Button scored 10 points in Abu Dhabi, which was doubled to 20, were as Magnussen didn't score points that race.
Lack of experience yes, it was his first F1-season. He couldn't possibly have more experience than Button or Alonso anyway![]()
It's the same for all drivers, and certainly was no issue for Sainz Jr or Verstappen in 2015.langwadt wrote:So he had the speed but had to relearn how to race in a formula where race pace come down to saving fuel and tires
he was impressive in his first test and at the beginning of the season, but as the season progressed he got worse as Button got better. I don't know if the setups changed to better suit Button and Magnussen just used the same because he didn't have the experience to do his own or that the pressure got to him.FoxHound wrote:My eyes deceived me on my phone! Thank you for the correction.ME4ME wrote:Actually Button beat him 10 to 9. Overall Magnussen was 0.165 s quicker in qualifying though.
Also Button scored 10 points in Abu Dhabi, which was doubled to 20, were as Magnussen didn't score points that race.
Lack of experience yes, it was his first F1-season. He couldn't possibly have more experience than Button or Alonso anyway![]()
I think the point needs to be made that there was stagnation as the campaign went on for Magnussen.
Instead of the steep learning curve, it kinda flattened out a bit. This also explains how McLaren gradually got cold feet over what was a great start for him.
It's the same for all drivers, and certainly was no issue for Sainz Jr or Verstappen in 2015.langwadt wrote:So he had the speed but had to relearn how to race in a formula where race pace come down to saving fuel and tires
You could argue that with the new engines, no coanda exhausts and new Pirelli compounds, that all drivers went into new territory for 2014 compared to preceding years.
I'm not hating on Magnussen, just fail to see what makes him exceptional over say, Kobayashi.
I'm not sure how credible this is, but according to Peter Windsor the car behavior in the beginning of the season was more "wild" and suited Magnussen better as he was able to extract more from the car than Button (IIRC).langwadt wrote:he was impressive in his first test and at the beginning of the season, but as the season progressed he got worse as Button got better. I don't know if the setups changed to better suit Button and Magnussen just used the same because he didn't have the experience to do his own or that the pressure got to him.FoxHound wrote:My eyes deceived me on my phone! Thank you for the correction.ME4ME wrote:Actually Button beat him 10 to 9. Overall Magnussen was 0.165 s quicker in qualifying though.
Also Button scored 10 points in Abu Dhabi, which was doubled to 20, were as Magnussen didn't score points that race.
Lack of experience yes, it was his first F1-season. He couldn't possibly have more experience than Button or Alonso anyway![]()
I think the point needs to be made that there was stagnation as the campaign went on for Magnussen.
Instead of the steep learning curve, it kinda flattened out a bit. This also explains how McLaren gradually got cold feet over what was a great start for him.
It's the same for all drivers, and certainly was no issue for Sainz Jr or Verstappen in 2015.langwadt wrote:So he had the speed but had to relearn how to race in a formula where race pace come down to saving fuel and tires
You could argue that with the new engines, no coanda exhausts and new Pirelli compounds, that all drivers went into new territory for 2014 compared to preceding years.
I'm not hating on Magnussen, just fail to see what makes him exceptional over say, Kobayashi.
I've not read anything like a time frame for driver announcements, can you give some kind of link to your post? I'd love to read whatever you've read. Ta!cbbcisace wrote:The final seats should get announced this week!
Manor Racing: between Rossi/Haryanto/Stevens/Werhlein/Magnussen
Renault: Palmer and either Pastor or Magnussen.