
Just watched Hamiltons onboard laps near the end of the race. I cannot understand how he and Ferrari got away with passing the pit-lane entry twice with a car in such an unsafe state. He was cutting corners just to make it round the track. He should've been straightup DSQ imo.
He did get 5 seconds. They did not completely got away with it.ME4ME wrote: ↑06 Oct 2025, 12:17Just watched Hamiltons onboard laps near the end of the race. I cannot understand how he and Ferrari got away with passing the pit-lane entry twice with a car in such an unsafe state. He was cutting corners just to make it round the track. He should've been straightup DSQ imo.
that's too lenient. Driving without brakes ? Park the car and trigger a yellow/red. Selfishly driving for points in clear violation of safety norms (Norris got 10s stop-n-go for 'not lifting for yellow' last year) deserves DSQ.Singapore2008 wrote: ↑07 Oct 2025, 11:49He did get 5 seconds. They did not completely got away with it.ME4ME wrote: ↑06 Oct 2025, 12:17Just watched Hamiltons onboard laps near the end of the race. I cannot understand how he and Ferrari got away with passing the pit-lane entry twice with a car in such an unsafe state. He was cutting corners just to make it round the track. He should've been straightup DSQ imo.
I do not think you can catch him like this. Since two? years they are much more holding back on the topic with the orange-black flag (that should have been given). Without the flag, I do not see under which rule you can or should punish the brake. There was no "unsafe release", I fail to see the rule under which the team is to punish here.
No body called for Norris to retire / get DQ'ed when his brakes failed in china. Why the calls now?venkyhere wrote: ↑07 Oct 2025, 14:23that's too lenient. Driving without brakes ? Park the car and trigger a yellow/red. Selfishly driving for points in clear violation of safety norms (Norris got 10s stop-n-go for 'not lifting for yellow' last year) deserves DSQ.Singapore2008 wrote: ↑07 Oct 2025, 11:49He did get 5 seconds. They did not completely got away with it.ME4ME wrote: ↑06 Oct 2025, 12:17
Just watched Hamiltons onboard laps near the end of the race. I cannot understand how he and Ferrari got away with passing the pit-lane entry twice with a car in such an unsafe state. He was cutting corners just to make it round the track. He should've been straightup DSQ imo.
Because Hamilton’s front brakes exploded and he was lapping over 30 seconds off the pace with very limited braking performance. Lando was managing a critical issue but his brakes never actually fully failed, at his slowest he was only 3-4 seconds off the pace due to LiCo. Details matter.Mosin123 wrote: ↑07 Oct 2025, 21:33No body called for Norris to retire / get DQ'ed when his brakes failed in china. Why the calls now?venkyhere wrote: ↑07 Oct 2025, 14:23that's too lenient. Driving without brakes ? Park the car and trigger a yellow/red. Selfishly driving for points in clear violation of safety norms (Norris got 10s stop-n-go for 'not lifting for yellow' last year) deserves DSQ.Singapore2008 wrote: ↑07 Oct 2025, 11:49
He did get 5 seconds. They did not completely got away with it.
Landos brakes could have failed completely at any time, his issues started 15 laps before the end, he was leaking brake fluid, just a few more laps and he would have been completely out of fluid according to Norris......Badger wrote: ↑08 Oct 2025, 22:23Because Hamilton’s front brakes exploded and he was lapping over 30 seconds off the pace with very limited braking performance. Lando was managing a critical issue but his brakes never actually fully failed, at his slowest he was only 3-4 seconds off the pace due to LiCo. Details matter.
But they didn’t fail, Hamilton’s did. Not being able to decelerate well is extremely dangerous in an F1 race needless to say. The lap times tell the story.Mosin123 wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 02:10Landos brakes could have failed completely at any time, his issues started 15 laps before the end, he was leaking brake fluid, just a few more laps and he would have been completely out of fluid according to Norris......Badger wrote: ↑08 Oct 2025, 22:23Because Hamilton’s front brakes exploded and he was lapping over 30 seconds off the pace with very limited braking performance. Lando was managing a critical issue but his brakes never actually fully failed, at his slowest he was only 3-4 seconds off the pace due to LiCo. Details matter.
LH brakes never completely failed, he just lost his front left, so nursed the car to the end... for 3 laps......
No driver was put at risk, in fact, Landos front wing damage for the whole race was more a risk to other drivers than LHs brake issue.
IF i was in an F1 car, i would be more worried about my front wing failing than my brakes, just by lifting and coasting i would already be slowing down faster than i would in my road legal car that has 4 perfectly working brakes.
But his brakes didnt fail - His front left brake disc fialed, not his brakes, please, details matter right?Badger wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 08:13But they didn’t fail, Hamilton’s did. Not being able to decelerate well is extremely dangerous in an F1 race needless to say. The lap times tell the story.Mosin123 wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 02:10Landos brakes could have failed completely at any time, his issues started 15 laps before the end, he was leaking brake fluid, just a few more laps and he would have been completely out of fluid according to Norris......Badger wrote: ↑08 Oct 2025, 22:23
Because Hamilton’s front brakes exploded and he was lapping over 30 seconds off the pace with very limited braking performance. Lando was managing a critical issue but his brakes never actually fully failed, at his slowest he was only 3-4 seconds off the pace due to LiCo. Details matter.
LH brakes never completely failed, he just lost his front left, so nursed the car to the end... for 3 laps......
No driver was put at risk, in fact, Landos front wing damage for the whole race was more a risk to other drivers than LHs brake issue.
IF i was in an F1 car, i would be more worried about my front wing failing than my brakes, just by lifting and coasting i would already be slowing down faster than i would in my road legal car that has 4 perfectly working brakes.
Not having brakes is far more dangerous than a slightly bent front wing end plate, which isn’t a critical part.
Hamilton had a brake failure and Lando didn’t, yet you said he did. Why did you misrepresent such an important fact? Then you immediately pivoted to a bent end plate when you realised you were mistaken. It’s almost as if there’s some other motive here, the way you felt the need to cast Hamilton as the victim when in reality he was lucky to get away with only a 5s penalty for cutting.Mosin123 wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 11:02But his brakes didnt fail - His front left brake disc fialed, not his brakes, please, details matter right?Badger wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 08:13But they didn’t fail, Hamilton’s did. Not being able to decelerate well is extremely dangerous in an F1 race needless to say. The lap times tell the story.Mosin123 wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 02:10
Landos brakes could have failed completely at any time, his issues started 15 laps before the end, he was leaking brake fluid, just a few more laps and he would have been completely out of fluid according to Norris......
LH brakes never completely failed, he just lost his front left, so nursed the car to the end... for 3 laps......
No driver was put at risk, in fact, Landos front wing damage for the whole race was more a risk to other drivers than LHs brake issue.
IF i was in an F1 car, i would be more worried about my front wing failing than my brakes, just by lifting and coasting i would already be slowing down faster than i would in my road legal car that has 4 perfectly working brakes.
Not having brakes is far more dangerous than a slightly bent front wing end plate, which isn’t a critical part.
An end plate can come lose, at high speeds and hit another driver, could be potentially lethal, its why we have regulations that force teams to pit and change them if the structural intergrity of it is compromised, not just for others safety, but for the driver too, cause if your front wing fails, you wont have any brakes, or be able to turn at all at high speeds. Ask Kobayashi.........
If your saying a f1 car running a little off pace is dangerous, then quali sessions should be banned out right for cars moving much much slower on out laps and cool down laps, seeing as motor racing is dangerous by nature, maybe we should give up real racing and just do sim racing. much much safer.
Bingo.venkyhere wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 12:38No matter which way the narrative is bent, a car with failed brakes (partially or fully) doesn't deserve to stay on track. Has to be forced to retire. Because it's Ferrari and because it's Hamilton, and because race control is a bunch of temporary staff who are afraid of media criticism and don't want to upset anyone's applecart, they didn't pick up the phone and issue a directive to Ferrari's pitwall. We can have all kinds of excuses and all kinds of stories from Tifosi and from LH44 fans, but that's the simple matter of fact - race control were too chicken, and issued a pathetic 5s penalty.
Relevance to road vehicles doesn't exactly translate in judgment here.Badger wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 12:10Hamilton had a brake failure and Lando didn’t, yet you said he did. Why did you misrepresent such an important fact? Then you immediately pivoted to a bent end plate when you realised you were mistaken. It’s almost as if there’s some other motive here, the way you felt the need to cast Hamilton as the victim when in reality he was lucky to get away with only a 5s penalty for cutting.Mosin123 wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 11:02But his brakes didnt fail - His front left brake disc fialed, not his brakes, please, details matter right?Badger wrote: ↑09 Oct 2025, 08:13
But they didn’t fail, Hamilton’s did. Not being able to decelerate well is extremely dangerous in an F1 race needless to say. The lap times tell the story.
Not having brakes is far more dangerous than a slightly bent front wing end plate, which isn’t a critical part.
An end plate can come lose, at high speeds and hit another driver, could be potentially lethal, its why we have regulations that force teams to pit and change them if the structural intergrity of it is compromised, not just for others safety, but for the driver too, cause if your front wing fails, you wont have any brakes, or be able to turn at all at high speeds. Ask Kobayashi.........
If your saying a f1 car running a little off pace is dangerous, then quali sessions should be banned out right for cars moving much much slower on out laps and cool down laps, seeing as motor racing is dangerous by nature, maybe we should give up real racing and just do sim racing. much much safer.
Any road car that has a brake failure is immediately illegal to drive. All those risks are elevated even more in an F1 race. It’s about as dangerous as it gets when it comes to car related failures.