segedunum wrote:mep wrote:The difference is that with refueling there is a way to pass a car in front of you especially when it is much slower than yours. Without refueling there is no chance because overtaking on track is impossible.
I'm thinking people are not reading what's been written. We've seen just as much overtaking via the pits this season via differing pace on different tyres as we did with refuelling. The only difference with refuelling was that it was used much more as a means to keep a position than to gain one. The variables were too poor to make it really work, and we saw that consistently over fifteen years.
The track record of refulling, through getting cars to carry qualifying fuel into the race and published fuel weights just shows you how poor it has been. I'm afraid you'll have few takers wanting to bring refuelling back after the season we've had.
Why are you bunching up refueling and race fuel qualy?
It's possible to have refueling and low fuel qualifying you know.
Things were much simpler then, and a lot more on the edge in terms of speed and excitement.
From observation refueling was better. That's my view on things.
It just provides more moments when something is happening.
Passing in the pits is not that bad either, becuase after passing in the pits, the passed car can still sprint to gain back his position with the pitted car on cold tyres. We saw this last year and it was exciting still.
There's something about racing against the clock that is more thrilling than running 40 laps with nothing going on, even if you're just racing the clock to refuel.
Refueling also added the excitement of a pitstop shoot out. When was the last time you saw one of those this year?
Canada was the last time i think 2 battling cars came into the pits the same time ti change tyres; i think Alonso and Lewis. Refueling definitely adds suspense to such events.