Well, it's nice to see the kids growing uphollus wrote:First of all: To everyone that stayed civil in this thread (which is everyone!): =D> =D> =D> Amazingly, this also seems to apply to the race thread![]()
![]()

I think the decision of the stewards not to punish Hamilton was logical. Not by any means fair, just logical. The directive given to the stewards tells them to close an eye on "first corner incidents". Due to that, it is very difficult to have both consistent decision making and still punishing oblivious errors. On top of that Verstappen and Rosberg on their own made mistakes. Without any previous lap data, it was impossible for the stewards to empirically prove the advantage Hamilton gained, even though obvious from the TV footage. So in that sense it was logical that no action was taken.As mentioned there: in Hamilton's case, the very reason that (in spirit) creates the first corner exception, does not apply. Of all 22 drivers, he was the only one that had a clear track ahead, an unimpeded line and did not need to react to anyone else's movements. OK, that's highly subjective, but the Stewards had available the most lenient penalty imaginable: a 5 second penalty which in practice would be served some 20 laps down the road. Weren't 5 second penalties introduced exactly so that Stewards would have a very minor penalty in their list of choices?
In any case, in case someone here is too young to know how Senna-Toleman's "foam chicanes" work:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZKTSCxGG1g
A 30cm high "foam wall" is probably a perfectly good deterrent (still a wall in human's eyes) that risks only the need to deploy a safety car. Installed far away enough from the apex, it would nicely have forced first Hamilton, then Rosberg and later Verstappen to go around it.
An it is a wonderful place for advertising. What coolest advertising that seeing your logo destroyed into a million pieces in super solow-mo in newsreels all over the world?
Ben only suggested a much broader spectrum usage of the current rules, meaning you are going from the current situation where the rules are littered by exceptions where penalties do not apply, you'd go to the same rules with few exceptions where the penalties do not apply.Phil wrote:If you want less controversy, IMO the sport needs to get less complicated, not more. And by adding more rules, that's exactly what you are doing...
Next to that, you don't always need ruling from stewards to get drivers to adjust their driving. Just make it a big enough disadvantage for drivers to discourage them.


https://gforcef1.wordpress.com/2012/11/ ... f1-tracks/
Having your tyres ruined to the point of no continueing yet bringing the car to a halt through grip seems to be as punishing as a wall without the safety issues.Paul Ricard features visually distinctive red and blue abrasive run-off zones, which punish mistakes dearly, as well as preventing cars from heavy crashes. In the picture to the right, the blue-striped area will slow the car down moderately, allowing the driver to rejoin the track with little danger. However, small tungsten strips in this section will also damage the user’s tyres as a result, providing a deterrent to leaving the track.
The red-striped areas behind will destroy any set of tyres, providing the maximum level of grip to slow a car before an impact with the barrier. Any F1 car that ran over this section would immediately be forced to pit for a new set of tyres, similar to how gravel traps will ruin the rubber on any set of Pirellis.