Locked up turn 1.
Perhaps similarly to Hamilton last week, just set up for a different race tomorrow.
That's what i thought as well. But was Hamilton's setup really any different than Bottas last Sunday ? If it was, it really didn't look that way tbh.
He was complaining about too much front wing. It's never certain. Perhaps the too much front wing was due to the temperature differences. Shouldn't see temp differences tomorrow, we'll know more.
The concern for Bottas should be that, the track being a "high speed/high downforce" circuit, the wake of leading car is bound effect the chasing car way too much and following a car through the high speed section is going to cause a lot of headache. So, getting into DRS is going to be tricky and hence, overtaking is going to be difficult. Unless the chasing car is more than a second faster, the overtaking is near to impossible.
Wow that looks really hairyema00 wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:22https://streamable.com/anz6j
that is clearly a stop for grosjean, anyway I didn't want a penalty... a yellow card would have been ok
That wouldn't have been a stupid analogy, had Vettel not received any penalty for that. He got one that costed him about 30 sec.GPR-A wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:10None of what you have mentioned, is worse than a driver deliberately banging his car with another car. So, as per FIA standards, a honest apology is enough to get out of the bigger crime, then in this case, even an apology isn't required. Still, Lewis has apologized. That's big.
Vettel is the one burning oil now, not the Ferrari in qualifying.GPR-A wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:36Let's talk about performance difference between Mercedes and Ferrari. Half a second is increasingly becoming a common sight, especially with Lewis' time in qualifying. Even with the upgrades, Ferrari is tailing off the qualifying pace. With Mercedes managing to take care of the tyres better now, Ferrari is slowly losing out in races too. Though Ferrari is not that far off in races, the overtaking is difficult with these cars and with Mercedes managing the strategic calls better than Ferrari, there seems to be no light for Ferrari.
Oh, and the abusive version of Vettel is out again! That's a sight to watch (err.. hear) !
I'm not sure when two wrongs started making a right? I'm also fairly sure that Vettel did get a penalty, no?GPR-A wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:10None of what you have mentioned, is worse than a driver deliberately banging his car with another car. So, as per FIA standards, a honest apology is enough to get out of the bigger crime, then in this case, even an apology isn't required. Still, Lewis has apologized. That's big.
I think you're missing the part about the penalty not being a DSQ from the race and potentially from the season.Wynters wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:41I'm not sure when two wrongs started making a right? I'm also fairly sure that Vettel did get a penalty, no?GPR-A wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:10None of what you have mentioned, is worse than a driver deliberately banging his car with another car. So, as per FIA standards, a honest apology is enough to get out of the bigger crime, then in this case, even an apology isn't required. Still, Lewis has apologized. That's big.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2556 ... -incidentsTAG wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:45I think you're missing the part about the penalty not being a DSQ from the race and potentially from the season.Wynters wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:41I'm not sure when two wrongs started making a right? I'm also fairly sure that Vettel did get a penalty, no?GPR-A wrote: ↑15 Jul 2017, 16:10None of what you have mentioned, is worse than a driver deliberately banging his car with another car. So, as per FIA standards, a honest apology is enough to get out of the bigger crime, then in this case, even an apology isn't required. Still, Lewis has apologized. That's big.
The only difference here is, the team principal asking his driver to do it and Vettel doing it all by himself.On the final lap at the wet Spielberg circuit, Audi's Timo Scheider, a two-time champion of the German touring car series, was lining up a move on sixth-placed Robert Wickens at Turn 2, only for both drivers to be passed by the latter's Mercedes team-mate and then-championship leader Pascal Wehrlein.
As the trio accelerated toward Turn 3, Scheider received a radio message from Dr. Wolfgang Ullrich—normally so gracious in both victory and defeat when representing Audi at the Le Mans 24 Hours—who told his driver: "Schieb ihn raus."
According to Motorsport.com's Charles Bradley, that translates to "push him out," and Scheider duly followed the doctor's orders, nudging Wickens under braking and sending both Mercedes cars into the deep, unforgiving depths of the gravel trap.
While Scheider was disqualified from the official results shortly after the race, the retrospective action taken by the German Motor Sports Association was firm and decisive, which is the sign of a well-governed motor-racing series.