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26 Sep 2011, 13:04 (Ref:2961134) | #26 | ||
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[QUOTE=M Greenslade;2961131]It's no coincidence that the British GP is usually a shining example of how to do it properly
What you mean like not showing the Chequred Flag to the top............ in the Porsche Super Cup race. Only teasing, I know the story, and couldn't resist |
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Comments made are personal and don't reflect any club or Motorsport UK policy. "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." - Albert Einstein |
27 Sep 2011, 09:56 (Ref:2961548) | #27 | ||
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there was one blog i was reading before i started marshalling, i dont know if its the way its worded but this may clear up just how much experience they have http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2010/10/0...re-grand-prix/ |
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27 Sep 2011, 10:23 (Ref:2961561) | #28 | |||
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'Doing it properly' at the GP is no different to how we work the remaining weekends of the season. The GP is probably one of the only events where we have 'everyone' on post we'd like. There's no need to 'make do' with low numbers etc, so of course it should be about perfect! In regards overseas F1 events, now that many are in places that don't have such a tradition of club racing, it's going to be harder to recruit experienced marshals. I was able to marshal at the first Singapore GP in '08 - purely off my own back. The marshalling was organised by CAMS (like BARC did at Abu Dhabi) - and they had large numbers of people there to train/mentor/lead the locals. The local marshals came to the race with very little or no experience of motorsport or marshalling. It was interesting to see the faces on post when the F1 cars came out for the first time! If the only race you get to marshal each year is F1, you're never going to get the trackside experience that F1 really needs or expects. However, if you have nowhere else to marshal you're stuck. |
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27 Sep 2011, 11:43 (Ref:2961603) | #29 | |||
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27 Sep 2011, 11:43 (Ref:2961604) | #30 | ||
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27 Sep 2011, 12:04 (Ref:2961616) | #31 | |||
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However, this is all off topic. |
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27 Sep 2011, 15:22 (Ref:2961710) | #32 | ||
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Wooley, you say no experience needed... Where do you get that opinion... At the British GP you flag as normal... Race control may ask you upgrade or withdraw flags but that is rare... You blue flag at your discretion except for the F1 race where we on a dedicated blue flag radio give a running type of updated info to assist the blue flag marshals...
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Examining Specialist, Experienced marshal,Flag marshal. |
27 Sep 2011, 16:17 (Ref:2961729) | #33 | |||
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When we went over to Abu Dhabi in 2009 it was the FIRST race meeting some of the UAE marshals had done. Time was rather tight and breaks within the sessions were few and short Not like over here is it? When we went over to Abu Dhabi in 2009, it was the FIRST race meeting that some of the local UAE marshals had done. |
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27 Sep 2011, 17:29 (Ref:2961753) | #34 | |||
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Over here we do it properly. And if they allowed us our normal flag signals instead of their dumb ones we'd do it even better. |
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27 Sep 2011, 19:32 (Ref:2961801) | #35 | |||
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Frankly, I think this is a brilliant system. I wish we had somebody telling us this at every race that has pit stops, or is otherwise long enough that it becomes tricky to keep track. Roy might remember that I thought Schumacher had lost a lap when he turned up in the middle of a group of cars after his collision/pit stop, and had to ask if he was on the same lap. Without this information, I might just have ended up wrongly blue flagging him. |
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"Sometimes, I just want to tell them 'it's not a race!'" - Guinness2702 |
27 Sep 2011, 21:25 (Ref:2961874) | #36 | ||
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Off topic, but what is more enjoyable, blue flagging at a clubbie at Cadwell or at F1 GP in Abu Dhabi being told what to do, I have done both and I know what gives me the greatest sense of 'why I am there'..........
Bladders......... |
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Life is for living, it is later than you think….. |
27 Sep 2011, 21:47 (Ref:2961901) | #37 | |||
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Still, each to their own....as long as you're enjoying it, long may it continue. |
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"Sometimes, I just want to tell them 'it's not a race!'" - Guinness2702 |
27 Sep 2011, 21:56 (Ref:2961908) | #38 | ||
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Still, each to their own....as long as you're enjoying it, long may it continue
Hear hear.... Bladders... |
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28 Sep 2011, 09:51 (Ref:2962095) | #39 | |
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and thats why although i dont mind and am confident in bluing and have been compliment many many many a time on a well placed blue, ill avoid it like the plague if i can...
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26 Oct 2011, 14:28 (Ref:2977162) | #40 | ||
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agreed. well presumably every possible event that runs under an msa permit at a circuit only would count, the easiest way to find out if the meeting has a permit for both days is to submit the prc's out, then if a "its non msa today" answer would be the reply then it wont count... track days are run under the company who hires the circuit and its all self governed, im not too clear but they have their own disclaimers, terms and conditions noone needs a race license more importantly its suprising just how much things dont need a permit, fyinterest even if goodwood hillclimb did count which it doesnt the Moving Motorshow didnt have a permit whereas the f.o.s competitive hillclimb the fri, sat, sun did... Last edited by Stephen Green; 26 Oct 2011 at 14:59. Reason: Most people wouldn't know what MM stood for |
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26 Oct 2011, 16:49 (Ref:2977238) | #41 | ||
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Yankee...whilst the FOS runs under permit for the three days, this is a sprint and hillclimb permit rather than a race permit. Only circuit race meetings are able to be counted towards your GP total.
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26 Oct 2011, 17:29 (Ref:2977261) | #42 | |
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agreed, it must be a real headache for some people sorting out the forms with all the confusion surrounding everything, i shouldnt have included the f.o.s, it just confuses things even more...!
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26 Oct 2011, 18:37 (Ref:2977295) | #43 | ||
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well for 7 years i includede the FOS on application Never had a rejection letter...just took the last 2 years out....
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26 Oct 2011, 18:38 (Ref:2977298) | #44 | ||
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so i wonder the lawnmower race is a MSA event and permit run so would that count..
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26 Oct 2011, 20:53 (Ref:2977381) | #45 | |
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I would suspect then that you had enough days to qualify whether FOS was counted or not. I believe it is the number of days they are looking for, rather than an inability to fill the form out correctly??
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27 Oct 2011, 08:23 (Ref:2977540) | #46 | ||
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Paul Norris |
27 Oct 2011, 10:05 (Ref:2977575) | #47 | ||
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lawnmower racing will most likely have an msa permit whether for all days i wouldnt know but ifs its classed as a circuit event, even if its on a "circuit", it may even be classed as a single venue rally event... check with someone more in the know like a marshals secretary... |
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27 Oct 2011, 10:59 (Ref:2977610) | #48 | ||
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If you need to count the days done at the lawnmower "race" to get above or to the limit that permits you to marshal at the UK's F1 event then in my book you really have not done enough of the right stuff in the previous year.
but then I'd give more weight to the MSA sprint/hillclimb championships. Perhaps aught to make one other international / FIA event a prerequisite, I was a little concerned this year by some of my team that lacked any experience of a level of racing above BTCC. flame away.. |
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27 Oct 2011, 11:19 (Ref:2977624) | #49 | ||
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doing an international event for f1 is an must for me, ive never applied before but its common sense, if i wanted to suceed with a place i wouldnt be comfortable with just btcc, yes fia events in some people's books arent good to marshal, i love the big fia events (for now), i dare say attending an fia circuit event should be in the stipulations, its not likes there's a shortage in this country we're really lucky, there's at least 6 i could mention on the spot, if not more it throws people when theyre not used to no stationary and waved flags, incident or flags, a weekend doesnt get people used to the way fia events run but gives them a feel the way it will be to marshal f1 (minus the style of cars obviously! and the politics i can imagine!) |
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27 Oct 2011, 11:39 (Ref:2977637) | #50 | |||
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"Miss Stroplash" - The Hooker - BGP 2009 |
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