quovadis
Honorary Master
I wonder what the odds might be...Twaddle. My take.
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I wonder what the odds might be...Twaddle. My take.
Twaddle. My take.
And RBPT-Ford too.Well for starters they've completely discounted Honda, and what metrics are they going on?
Cars have 850 HP for most of the lap but 1000 for just over 30 seconds. All three current engine manufacturers are very close.
Sure, 50/50 E to ICE ratio is a big shift... for everyone.
So how would you rank current engines and what metrics would you use?
I wonder if the Full Wets could handle it
Might actually need em since there’s basically no real proper drainage.Those are for show. Nobody uses them anymore, that’s so 1990s
That location. In fairness it’s not just that - there is a flood advisory out which is atypical.From a local
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I’ll just point out that practice is on Thursday, qualifying is on Friday and the race is on Saturday.
Failure of the rulebook, or failure of administrators? If true, why do they keep covering up cheating in the name of 'maintaining the image of the sport'?Yet again a failure of the rule book. If they were found to be "cheating" then DSQ them.
Too much wear, DSQ. Place something to prevent too much wear, *crickets*.Yet again a failure of the rule book. If they were found to be "cheating" then DSQ them.
This makes no sense at all.www.facebook.com
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"A new rumour arised after the Brazilian GP weekend. Apparently, the FIA discovered after the Brazilian sprint that some teams were 'cheating': they were using titanium plates that expanded with the heat, thus staying below the limit and reducing their wear (allowing them to lower the car without disqualification)
This trick was working because after the session, the drivers retunr slowly to the pits, letting the metal cool down, returning to its original shape, and hence appearing legal to the FIA during its checks.
Jo Bauer (FIA technical delegate) ordered full inspection of all cars before qulifying (after the sprint), and told them to remove these devices, forcing some to raise the ride height.
This source say that almost all teams used this trick.
The FIA is working on the matter to ban it starting from next year."