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danegrey 07-25-2022 07:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZCanadian (Post 4027789)
Just me, or was that the best French GP in forever?

Coincidence, or was it the new cars that made the difference?

the cars being new, and everyone all over the place on how to make the cars work. Cars with lots of updates and cars with very little updates,, Engines that break and engines that are not where they should be

in the end it was a fun race to watch... and do me that is all that matters

DLSTR 07-26-2022 12:29 PM

THe best Ferrari driver right now and for the last month has been Sainz. Charles is a mess of complaints and mistakes mixed with amazing talent.

His number of poles = 16. That has only brought 4 wins in total. All others are fails due to errors, strategy error or DNF. He needs to really stop looking like Vettel in the Ferrari of 2018 and 2019. He needs to stop tossing wins and drive the team forward. Right now Id rate Carlos over him.

Carlos gets it done. Does not whine on the radio as Charles did in UK GP or make ridiculous errors in the lead. Is he as fast as Charles no he is not. He is more reliable, cunning and focused. He is also the SMARTER driver in a Ferrari right now. He was FASTER than Charles all weekend in France. NO question. He is on the up.........hopefully and stays that way.

Ventruck 07-26-2022 09:37 PM

Yeah, I see Charles as the faster driver, Carlos as the better racer.

Not to make excuses for him, but I'm sure Charles was all wound up with how the season is going. He could've lived with today if some obvious team screw-ups never happened.

DLSTR 07-28-2022 12:17 PM

Vettel will retire at the end of this season! Now the fun begins!

https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/wh...exit/10344534/

Option 1 - Nico Hulkenberg
Option 2 - Fernando Alonso

The rest

If not Alonso, then who? The list of big names who are going out of contract and might see Aston as an upgrade is very short.

Alex Albon is one, and he could be an interesting choice. He would certainly fit the bill of not making waves with his team-mate.

Mick Schumacher is also out of contract at Haas, and no doubt Vettel will be singing the praises of his protege. He'd also be great on the marketing side. But has the youngster really done enough to convince Aston folk? And would he be willing to cut his Ferrari ties?

Another potential candidate is Daniel Ricciardo, who in theory is still under contract to McLaren. However, he could either be dropped by McLaren or exit in a "controlled manner" that suits all parties should he be offered an Aston deal. That would open up a seat for Colton Herta or someone else that McLaren wants to promote.

Ricciardo ticks a lot of boxes, but will Aston really want to take someone who has struggled so much at McLaren, and shows few clear signs of digging himself out of the hole he is now in?

If Aston doesn't take Alonso, it won't want Piastri – Stroll would not want to take on a rival team's protege, train him up, and send him back to Enstone and former Aston boss Otmar Szafnauer.

There is one other rookie who could be an outside bet. Nyck de Vries is highly-rated in the paddock, and his recent FP1 outings with Williams and Mercedes have done him no harm.



He's on the list of Aston reserves, at races where Hulkenberg is not present, and thus there has been some contact. Aston also still has two FP1 rookie sessions to deploy this year, during which they can assess him.

The team uses Mercedes engines and that there are all sorts of connections between Stroll and Toto Wolff that would make such a deal painless. And it would be very easy for Mercedes to hand him to Aston with no ongoing contractual ties to the Brackley team, so he would belong to Stroll with no strings attached.

Ventruck 07-28-2022 07:59 PM

In-the-moment thinking, I don't see that Alonso would want that seat. That's just going to make him want to retire as well.

Mick at least has chemistry at HAAS.

Right now it'd have to be a rookie you mention, or Danny Ric trying to salvage his career.

DLSTR 07-30-2022 02:58 PM

Mixed grid via the rain-washed track and cooler temps vs Friday. Should be a fun race and start!!

Ventruck 07-31-2022 11:13 AM

I'm selling my imaginary Ferrari after that s***.

But good stuff Max. Guy's kinda been quiet compared to seasons before and just taking care of business. Same with Ham.

danegrey 07-31-2022 11:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ventruck (Post 4028063)
I'm selling my imaginary Ferrari after that s***.

But good stuff Max. Guy's kinda been quiet compared to seasons before and just taking care of business. Same with Ham.

:iagree:

Have no clue as to what Ferrari strategy was... My son were just Fbombing the entire time...

Max wow, and RB all the right calls...
MB / Hamilton / Russell / maybe a winner this year, maybe...

The rest of the strategy Hard's were not working at all...

still enjoyable....

DLSTR 08-01-2022 07:12 AM

Lance is fkd now LOL

Fernando Alonso joins Aston Martin for 2023 F1 season on multi-year deal
Fernando Alonso has joined Aston Martin on a multi-year starting from the 2023 Formula 1 season.

danegrey 08-01-2022 08:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DLSTR (Post 4028076)
Lance is fkd now LOL

Fernando Alonso joins Aston Martin for 2023 F1 season on multi-year deal
Fernando Alonso has joined Aston Martin on a multi-year starting from the 2023 Formula 1 season.

Saw this last night and just shook my head... don't understand Aston Martin and don't understand Alonso

DLSTR 08-01-2022 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by danegrey (Post 4028081)
Saw this last night and just shook my head... don't understand Aston Martin and don't understand Alonso

The investment Aston are making, new factory, wind tunnel etc is very large and shows progress. Alpine have done that and I also think Alonso is not sensing the team working with him as closely as he likes. Ocon is young and fast. He is the future more so than FA.

Money talks and Stroll was working the phones to Alonso as soon as Vettel announced. NO ONE was warned Vettel was leaving either.

Stroll also needs a WDC to be avail in the paddock for investors/guests and adverts for his Aston car sales.

Ventruck 08-01-2022 08:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by danegrey (Post 4028081)
Saw this last night and just shook my head... don't understand Aston Martin and don't understand Alonso

That's just the cool thing to do:

Have your career get crapped on by Ferrari
Then have it end with Aston

Seb knows.
Lewis probably to follow.

DLSTR 08-02-2022 10:36 AM

Alpine: Piastri can’t leave us for McLaren F1 seat in wake of shock Alonso exit
Alpine Formula 1 boss Otmar Szafnauer insists that Oscar Piastri is contractually obliged to drive for the team in 2023 after Fernando Alonso's departure made a race seat available.

God-Speed 08-02-2022 11:10 AM

1 Attachment(s)
As far as the Ferrari Team goes, they have became their own worst enemy.

DLSTR 08-02-2022 01:53 PM

Now we have an F1 soap opera lol

--Piastri denies he has signed with Alpine to race in F1 in 2023
Oscar Piastri has released a statement denying he has signed a deal to race for Alpine in Formula 1 next season just hours after the team stated otherwise.--

danegrey 08-02-2022 05:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DLSTR (Post 4028144)
Now we have an F1 soap opera lol

--Piastri denies he has signed with Alpine to race in F1 in 2023
Oscar Piastri has released a statement denying he has signed a deal to race for Alpine in Formula 1 next season just hours after the team stated otherwise.--

so I wonder with all this crap who really going to drive for McLaren
Palou - states Ganassi blocking him from F1
Herta - tested
O'Ward - has something in his contract... test days

will get interesting

Ventruck 08-02-2022 07:41 PM

- Started with Seb out
- to Alonso weirdly lusting over that AMR spot (or is Alpine that awful?)
- to Alpine claiming Piastri as Alonso's replacement
- to Piastri denying he will drive for Alpine (lol imagine turning down an F1 seat, maybe Alpine is that awful)
- to Alpine not letting Piastri go to McLaren
- and while this is all transpiring, sounds like a given that McLaren wants Riccardo's *** out. (maybe both teams are awful)

I'm not really rooting for/against anyone, but this just funny, and it doesn't even have to do with Ferrari.

DLSTR 08-03-2022 02:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ventruck (Post 4028154)
- Started with Seb out
- to Alonso weirdly lusting over that AMR spot (or is Alpine that awful?)
- to Alpine claiming Piastri as Alonso's replacement
- to Piastri denying he will drive for Alpine (lol imagine turning down an F1 seat, maybe Alpine is that awful)
- to Alpine not letting Piastri go to McLaren
- and while this is all transpiring, sounds like a given that McLaren wants Riccardo's *** out. (maybe both teams are awful)

I'm not really rooting for/against anyone, but this just funny, and it doesn't even have to do with Ferrari.

Yes all this shite over teams that are not about to win or anything else. They look good getting passed LOL :) :happydance::driving::happydance::driving:

ZCanadian 08-03-2022 04:01 PM

Binotto must be happy - two days after the cluster-F at Budapest, and he's no longer the main topic of discussion on F1 threads! LOL

For Piastri to so publicly humiliate Alpine means that he already has a firm contract to drive with another team. He just cannot say which one as yet. I cannot read it any other way. Can you?

DLSTR 08-04-2022 10:08 AM

https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/wh...gain/10348498/

Why Red Bull and Porsche's F1 green light has been delayed again
Red Bull and Porsche’s plans to link up from 2026 currently stand as the worst-kept secret in Formula 1, but announcement plans continue to be pushed back.



By: Luke Smith
Co-author: Christian Nimmervoll
Aug 4, 2022, 12:58 PM


The two parties are set to enter a partnership under the next generation of power unit rules after the Volkswagen Group advisory board gave the nod for Porsche and its sister brand, Audi, to explore entering F1 earlier this year.

The deal will see Porsche take a 50% stake in Red Bull’s F1 operation, as confirmed in legal paperwork that emerged in Morocco towards the end of last month.

The documents also claimed the deal could be announced as early as today, 4th August, but the green light has still not been given.

Red Bull F1 boss Christian Horner said in Hungary there was still a “lengthy process” to go through before any possible deal could be announced, noting the “caveats” surrounding Porsche’s status as a new engine manufacturer and what concessions it may get.

The VW Group has been reluctant to given final approval until the engine rules for 2026 are finalised, meaning so long as the regulations remain unfinished, Red Bull and Porsche’s announcement must wait. Red Bull had hoped to go public with the news at its home race in Austria almost a month ago.

Some of the details include how many hours will be allowed in engine testing for a new entity such as Porsche, as well as the material used for engine pistons. While the existing manufacturers want to use steel given their prior experience, Porsche is understood to be keen on a switch to aluminium.

The haggling over these issues has caused the e-vote planned by the World Motor Sport Council to be postponed. A vote was initially meant to take place on 2nd August, but this has now been pushed back to 8th August. The results may take longer to come through due to the summer break.


Speaking to Autosport sister publication Motorsport-Total.com in Hungary, Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko said the matter was “very simple.”

“VW’s board decision is that if the technical regulations meet the criteria, then they have the mandate to go into Formula 1,” Marko said.

“That primarily relates to cost cap, sustainability, zero-emission fuel, equal opportunity as a newcomer, so more dyno capacity, and so on.

“But in purely formal terms, these new regulations don't exist yet. The FIA president is supposedly going to put it to the vote soon in an e-mail vote. Only then will things officially get underway.”

Ferrari and Mercedes have previously denied they were dragging their heels in approving the new rules to frustrate Porsche and Audi’s plans.

But Marko said the “established players” in F1 were “trying to get the best out of it for themselves” by eating into the time for any newcomers to prepare.

Red Bull announced earlier this week that Honda would continue to provide technical support for its power units and engines until the end of 2025.

Red Bull formed its own operation known as Red Bull Powertrains at Milton Keynes that was set to take over from Honda at the end of this year following the Japanese manufacturer’s decision to end its F1 involvement after 2021, only for the engine freeze to change these support plans.

The extension of this deal means there is less doubt over the status of Red Bull Powertrains as a new entrant from 2026, when it is poised to work with Porsche.

“They're just working toward the 2026 regulations,” Marko said of the current focus at Red Bull Powertrains. “If a new manufacturer comes along, they can cooperate.”


Marko also confirmed that Red Bull and sister team AlphaTauri will continue to use the same powertrains from 2026, paving the way for Porsche to also supply engines to the Italian squad should the regulations be finalised. Ownership of AlphaTauri is set to remain 100% in the hands of Red Bull.

DLSTR 08-05-2022 12:57 PM

McLaren all tras n no class lol. So Pastry-unproven-Boy is the next hot thing lol. Ok! Build a BETTER car!!!

—McLaren set to end Ricciardo’s 2023 F1 deal to make way for Piastri—

The McLaren Formula 1 team has officially told Daniel Ricciardo that it intends to replace him with Oscar Piastri next year, Autosport understands.

Adam Cooper
By:
Adam Cooper
Aug 5, 2022, 12:46 PM
McLaren set to end Ricciardo’s 2023 F1 deal to make way for Piastri
McLaren is believed to have signed Piastri initially on a reserve driver deal for 2023, one that it intends to upgrade to a race seat, assuming that a plan for Ricciardo’s early exit is eventually agreed.

Ricciardo has a firm McLaren contract for next season as part of the original three-year deal that he signed in early 2020, while still at Renault.

Ricciardo and the team will now have to agree a settlement involving a substantial pay-off in order for him to walk away at the end of this season.

He is understood to have no interest in moving sideways into the team’s Formula E programme, and is determined to find another seat in F1.

The Woking-based team is confident that it can hang on to Piastri despite Alpine’s claim that it has a valid contract with the youngster for 2023.

The Enstone team made an announcement to that effect on Tuesday that was subsequently challenged by Piastri on social media.

It’s believed that Piastri’s ability to walk away from Alpine is based on a claim that his 2023 deal with the team was never properly signed. The 31st July date – widely believed to be related to an option the team had on him – is understood to have no special relevance.

The dispute looks set to go to the Contract Recognition Board, although there is also some question of whether Alpine actually lodged a contract with the CRB that covered 2023.


It has emerged that McLaren began to explore the possibility of hiring Piastri several weeks ago as it looked for possible replacements for Ricciardo.

McLaren team principal Andreas Seidl is close to Piastri’s manager Mark Webber, having worked with him with Porsche in the World Endurance Championship.

At that time Piastri looked set to go to Williams on a loan deal that would see him return to Alpine in 2024 or 2025.

However, after McLaren showed an interest, it emerged that Piastri could be a free agent for 2023 after all, and with the Woking outfit seen as a step up from Williams, negotiations became more serious.

Ricciardo meanwhile is clearly high on the list of possible replacements for Fernando Alonso at Alpine, although he upset the Renault top management when he agreed his McLaren move, and that hurdle will have to be overcome.

Read Also:
Ricciardo will use F1 summer break to build up “hunger”
Alonso’s age a factor in why Alpine would not commit to long-term F1 deal
Autosport Podcast: Alonso, Piastri, Aston and Alpine - making sense of driver market madness
Haas could also be an option if as expected Mick Schumacher leaves, although in theory Ferrari has a claim on who takes the seat.

Sometimes pay-off deals like the one Ricciardo is set to receive can be impacted by the driver concerned subsequently finding a seat elsewhere. When Kimi Raikkonen was dropped by Ferrari at the end of 2009 he spent two years out of F1 in part so he could retain the full amount.

However, it’s understood that given the sums involved required to satisfy Ricciardo’s original deal, one scenario is that even if he lands a drive elsewhere he may end up still being paid by McLaren not to race for the team in 2023.

axmea? 08-16-2022 03:21 AM

I like DR but he's not even close to LN plus too many excuses or promises. He's not getting the job done and so no choice but to let him go.

DLSTR 08-16-2022 12:28 PM

https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/wh...les-/10353381/

Why Mercedes steered clear of an F1 car concept revamp despite early struggles
Mercedes opted against revamping its Formula 1 car concept despite its early struggles in 2022 as it felt following other designs would "only get you so far."

Luke Smith
By:
Luke Smith
Co-author:
Jonathan Noble
Aug 16, 2022, 5:13 PM
Why Mercedes steered clear of an F1 car concept revamp despite early struggles

Mercedes failed to regularly challenge Red Bull and Ferrari at the front of the pack through the first half of this season as it struggled with porpoising and bouncing on its W13 car.

The team opted for a different design route compared to the rest of the field, chasing a slimline sidepod solution that was dubbed the 'zeropod' when it debuted in Bahrain testing.

As the season progressed, Mercedes gained a better understanding of its car and the issues it faced, paving the way for George Russell to score pole in Hungary at the end of July.

Mercedes trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin explained Mercedes was "not wanting to go down the route of just copying the fastest car that we could see", instead taking a long-term view with its car concept.

"When you look at the long-term future as a team through a set of regulations, if you don't understand it, copying will only get you so far," Shovlin told Autosport.

"The most sensitive elements of the car's aerodynamics exist underneath it. So the bit that you are least able to copy is the bit that's most important anyway.

"I would say that in the media, the concept of the narrow bodywork was probably a much bigger talking point than it was within the team.

"But we weren't clinging to it through any kind of sort of affection for our own ideas."

Shovlin said the problems Mercedes faced "would not have been solved by changing our bodywork in a hurry" and following other design routes for this year, particularly given the pressure of the budget cap.

"We need to be very careful about where we're where we're spending that [resource] and what we didn't want to do was embark on a project that might take four to six weeks to deliver," Shovlin said.

"We wanted to go step-by-step and check, does what we're doing on the car makes sense with all of our tools and all of our expectations?

"Because we were almost tiptoeing through the early steps of development, just to see if we can make a change to the car and get the expected effect, rather than put all our hopes in motion for something that looks physically different and can suddenly rocket us up the grid."
Read Also:


Mercedes has not ruled out switching car concept for next year and following a Red Bull-style design route, given the majority of teams have opted for its sidepod solution.

Team principal Toto Wolff said Mercedes had "no specific preference" over what concept it follows, but that it is simply "about having the quickest car."

"We will never copy anybody else, but we may see things on other cars that we deem to be better," Wolff told Autosport.

"So these fundamental questions are being discussed at the moment and [will be] answered by September."

axmea? 08-16-2022 01:37 PM

Toto and MB are too proud to follow others and will not admit it, is one reason they're apprehensive to change and sticking with their design. They'll continue to invest resources and find a way to make it work.

He'll also influence to change the rules instead of change their design/concept.

DLSTR 08-17-2022 12:01 PM

https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/co...eams/10353821/

Could late rule changes to F1 2023 floors aid bigger teams?
The FIA World Motor Sport Council finally pushed through rule changes to address porpoising for the 2023 Formula 1 season, amid suggestions the late alterations will help bigger teams.
By:
Filip Cleeren
Co-author:
Luke Smith
Aug 17, 2022, 5:11 PM
Could late rule changes to F1 2023 floors aid bigger teams?

After much debate, the edge of the cars' floors will be raised for 2023 and the diffuser throat height will also be raised, while the floor edges will also be stiffened to combat the dreaded bouncing issue that has plagued some F1 teams in 2022.

The FIA will also demand the placement of additional sensor on the floor to monitor porpoising.

Rather than the 25mm floor raise that the FIA initially proposed, and which several teams lobbied against, a compromise of 15mm has now been pushed through.

Ferrari and Red Bull were among the teams against the changes, while McLaren and Mercedes - which struggled the most with bouncing – pushed for the change on safety grounds.

In Tuesday's announcement the FIA said the changes will be implemented in a way that should "avoid any impact on the teams' designs of the mechanical components".

But with designs for the 2023 machinery already at an advanced stage by now, some suggest the late nature of the changes will make it easier for the bigger teams to respond.

Speaking ahead of the summer break and the final decision on the rule changes, Alpine chief technical officer Pat Fry said he believed the tweaks to F1’s floor regulations for 2023 will only aid bigger teams as they could call on more staff to react to the issue.

“For us it is engineering resource, we’ve clearly got a lot smaller aero department than the three above us and the one we are fighting with, they are all bigger than us,” Fry said.

“They might have 20 people parked outside the cost cap doing sailing or push bikes, but they can quite easily drag them back in to hit a problem and then send them away again.

“So when you’ve got that level of extra capacity, they’ve got a huge advantage. Delaying the rules for them is great, because they know all the small teams are not going to be able to cope.”
2023 Proposal rules front view

2023 Proposal rules front view

Photo by: Giorgio Piola

Fry said that although Alpine was “growing and getting better”, it remained “sensibly-sized” within the cost cap and without the “massive overspill” of staff that other outfits had.

Teams were forced to work to the new cost cap of $145 million per season from last year, prompting some of the bigger squads to divert staff to other projects.

“It is a little bit challenging for us,” Fry said before the rule changes were confirmed. “The sooner for us to know [about the changes], the better really, because if it is going to change, we are going to tear up what we are going to do already.

“I am sure every team is running some number of weeks in the windtunnel for next year’s car concept anyway, we certainly are.

“But how much of that work we’ve actually done is going to get changed with a rule change.”

The FIA has also ratified a roll hoop change in response to a scary accident for Zhou Guanyu in July's British Grand Prix, in which the Alfa Romeo's roll hoop was sheared off.

The top of the roll hoop design will be tweaked, while homologation tests have also been revised ahead of further planned changes in 2024.

ltullos 08-18-2022 10:43 PM

Ferrari Garage Pic Leaked
 
http://www.the370z.com/members/ltull...age-lo-res.jpg

Find all of the easter eggs. Here's a link to the original.

ZCanadian 08-19-2022 11:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ltullos (Post 4028782)
http://www.the370z.com/members/ltull...age-lo-res.jpg

Find all of the easter eggs. Here's a link to the original.

Yup. lots of cool stuff hidden in there.
Very funny. Somebody had way too much time on their hands!

DLSTR 08-22-2022 12:48 PM

F1 is BACK this weekend - THANK the RACING F1 Gods! :)

Sky preview with all the questions/considerations to restart this season - https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/12...-as-f1-returns

danegrey 08-22-2022 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DLSTR (Post 4028923)
F1 is BACK this weekend - THANK the RACING F1 Gods! :)

Sky preview with all the questions/considerations to restart this season - https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/12...-as-f1-returns

Interesting for all the talk, Leclerc, has only crashed out of one race. The rest have been car problems or strategy I actually thought he had more shunts in races.

DLSTR 08-22-2022 11:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by danegrey (Post 4028938)
Interesting for all the talk, Leclerc, has only crashed out of one race. The rest have been car problems or strategy I actually thought he had more shunts in races.

https://www.espn.com/f1/story/_/id/3...le-bid-tatters

.... an exact figure of 32 can be traced to Leclerc himself.

The first of Leclerc's mistakes came at Imola in April when he spun out of a solid third position trying to catch the two Red Bulls ahead and dropped to fifth at the finish, costing him seven points. The second came on Sunday when he threw away a clear shot at victory, costing him a full 25- French GP.

** He also had unforced errors last year. He has now a reputation for VERY poorly timed errors and he cannot literally afford another or that label becomes MUCH stickier lol

axmea? 08-25-2022 10:53 PM

Zoltar says he's gonna shunt at least one more time.



Quote:

Originally Posted by DLSTR (Post 4028948)
https://www.espn.com/f1/story/_/id/3...le-bid-tatters

.... an exact figure of 32 can be traced to Leclerc himself.

The first of Leclerc's mistakes came at Imola in April when he spun out of a solid third position trying to catch the two Red Bulls ahead and dropped to fifth at the finish, costing him seven points. The second came on Sunday when he threw away a clear shot at victory, costing him a full 25- French GP.

** He also had unforced errors last year. He has now a reputation for VERY poorly timed errors and he cannot literally afford another or that label becomes MUCH stickier lol


danegrey 08-27-2022 08:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by axmea? (Post 4029103)
Zoltar says he's gonna shunt at least one more time.

Saw this morning in 3rd practice, he did have an off...

God-Speed 08-27-2022 01:20 PM

Just FYI guys. When I was in Vegas last week. I talked to the front desk at the Mirage about room rates for the F1 race in Nov of 2023. They were able to pull up rates even though they will be under Hard Rock by then. The basic room rate for that weekend was $2300 a night. :eek: I knew it was going to be expensive but $2300 for a base room. The Mrs & I might be missing this one.

DLSTR 08-27-2022 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by danegrey (Post 4029180)
Saw this morning in 3rd practice, he did have an off...

Yep - good to find and test limit but if he bends the chassis then its his irresponsibility and error prone way again. He needs to keep it clean. A major off costing large # of points or a win and his stock drops like Titanic.

danegrey 08-28-2022 05:56 PM

Watch the race with my son this morning...
boring -- why it was all Max and RB, credit to them for the dominate win...
Hamilton -- what in the world was he thinking, could've been so much
Rico - McLaren -- I think it was Rico - there is no plan G...
Alpine - ok, looking good
HAAS - no where
Williams and Albon - 10th on straight line speed..
Bottas -- bad luck
Ferrari - conversation with the drivers about strategy and tires
Leclerc - bad luck, and going for the fastest lap caught him speeding, 5 sec penalty..

Question was the visor tear off from Max that got caught in Leclerc front brake duct?

ZCanadian 08-29-2022 12:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by danegrey (Post 4029238)
Question was the visor tear off from Max that got caught in Leclerc front brake duct?

Extra panel on Max's car:
https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2010...17_306x342.jpg

DLSTR 08-29-2022 01:07 PM

[QUOTE
Question was the visor tear off from Max that got caught in Leclerc front brake duct?[/QUOTE]

Video evidence shows it was Verstappen’s tear off in Leclerc’s brake duct

Video footage of the opening lap of Formula 1’s Belgian Grand Prix has left Ferrari in no doubt that the tear off that wrecked Charles Leclerc’s race was Max Verstappen’s.

ZCanadian 08-29-2022 01:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DLSTR (Post 4029286)
[QUOTE
Question was the visor tear off from Max that got caught in Leclerc front brake duct?

Video evidence shows it was Verstappen’s tear off in Leclerc’s brake duct

Video footage of the opening lap of Formula 1’s Belgian Grand Prix has left Ferrari in no doubt that the tear off that wrecked Charles Leclerc’s race was Max Verstappen’s.[/QUOTE]

Do you have the link?

That would explain the smoke coming from the wheel area, which he noted on the radio.

I heard a report that the heat from this might have also damaged a speed sensor (hence the speeding in the pit lane), but suspect that is only an excuse? Have you heard anything?

DLSTR 08-29-2022 11:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZCanadian (Post 4029288)
Video evidence shows it was Verstappen’s tear off in Leclerc’s brake duct

Video footage of the opening lap of Formula 1’s Belgian Grand Prix has left Ferrari in no doubt that the tear off that wrecked Charles Leclerc’s race was Max Verstappen’s.

Do you have the link?

That would explain the smoke coming from the wheel area, which he noted on the radio.

I heard a report that the heat from this might have also damaged a speed sensor (hence the speeding in the pit lane), but suspect that is only an excuse? Have you heard anything?[/QUOTE]

https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/vi...duct/10359944/

With Leclerc running right behind Verstappen at the time, footage showed that it was the Red Bull driver's tear off that was thrown directly in to the path of the Ferrari driver and got stuck in his brake duct.

ZCanadian 08-30-2022 12:24 PM

Saw some Mario Kart memes of this last night. LOL.
Max must have spent his summer break developing his pitching arm. :-)


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