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13 Oct 2023, 09:10 (Ref:4181234) | #26 | ||
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Well, on a very simplistic level, the drivers are the ones with a steering wheel and control over where they put the car on the circuit, aren't they.....? I'm going out this morning down to the shops, I could drive over the curbs here and there and drive over the pavement in places to get me past traffic and potentially get me there fractionally quicker, but I don't, as that would be foolish and it's not allowed as I am supposed to drive on the road. I know that. So do all the other drivers. The fact that the pavement might look inviting to me or give me some advantage due to the design of the road is neither here nor there.
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13 Oct 2023, 09:26 (Ref:4181238) | #27 | ||
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13 Oct 2023, 09:27 (Ref:4181239) | #28 | |
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The problem is the tracks these days allow drivers to get away with more than they did back in the day. But what's worse is now there are places where using the runoff is quicker. So they need to get rid of it in places where an advantage can be gained. It's that simple in my book. These track limit penalties are too much and clearly aren't a deterrent
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13 Oct 2023, 10:01 (Ref:4181244) | #29 | |||
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In Austria there were 1,200. Simply telling the drivers to not do it will not work. https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/fi...n-gp/10490773/ |
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13 Oct 2023, 10:18 (Ref:4181245) | #30 | |||
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Well, I come back to my proposition from earlier in this thread (and countless others): the FIA has to grow a backbone and introduce draconian penalties that actually punish errant drivers which they enforce rigorously or they just ignore track limits and just let the drivers decide which parts of the area they want to drive on as it's obvious that the drivers are incapable of keeping on the track. |
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13 Oct 2023, 11:52 (Ref:4181248) | #31 | ||
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Your point seems to be that if the penalty was more severe they wouldn’t do it and I agree with this. As it is, the penalty already exceeds any benefit they get for ignoring the track limit. I could be wrong but I think during the race they get 3 warnings and then each successive offence is 5 seconds. Of course in qualy they lose the lap which has been a very heavy penalty. In summary, I think the current penalty system is reasonable however a system that provided more timely advice of limit breaches would be beneficial. |
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13 Oct 2023, 11:53 (Ref:4181249) | #32 | |||
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13 Oct 2023, 12:58 (Ref:4181259) | #33 | |||
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I'm sorry to drag this out, however it's not the fault or design of the tracks. It's simply that the drivers are not driving within the boundaries; they are taking advantage of parts of the construction of the circuit that are supposed to be out of bounds. They should, therefore, adapt their driving to suit what are considered to be the track limits. If that means they may have to enter or exit bends and corners a fraction slower. And with reference to the 1200 figure, that was not the number of penalties; that was the number of time that drivers exceeded track limits. Furthermore, in that same article that you gave a link, it also said that both Alonso and Russell "escaped without at least one incident of a track limits violation". Now if those two can do it, why can't the rest? Drivers have to drive according to the, let's call it, the circumstances; just as road users should alter their driving to suit conditions such as heavy rain, or ice and snow. It's really easy to do, and it shouldn't be hard for drivers who are supposedly the cream of the crop. |
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13 Oct 2023, 13:12 (Ref:4181262) | #34 | |||
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13 Oct 2023, 13:15 (Ref:4181263) | #35 | ||||||||||
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You ask for comments regarding a circuit such as Silverstone. Of which I do explain in that same post. However I talk generically. But if you want specifics, then here is my thoughts regarding Silverstone. But first, a small pre-amble. Generally when track limits are exceeded it is either cutting a corner on the inside or running wide on the exit. And the main issue we see is running wide on exists. But I will talk a bit to both. Silverstone seems to primarily stop this by strategic red sausage curbs. These are not tempting to ride as the circuit is quick and you typically will have the car on edge and riding those high curbs at speeds will risk damage or crashing. A few corners have walls on the inside such as Copse, but in reality it really is the placement of sausage curbs. I also think the circuit design doesn't have much in then way of "running wide gains time" except for maybe the exit of Stowe. And if I remember correctly this is exactly a place where track limits can be a problem at Silverstone. Lastly, I "think" Silverstone is one of the wider tracks. So the wider the track, the more likely that the naturally fast line will NOT exceed the limits of the circuit. If you were to trim off the outside width on some corners you probably would increase the likelyhood for track limit violations. Especially if the ability to run wide was not risky to the car. I say all of this without really being particularly knowledgeable of Silverstone and might have missed some details. At the end of the day, the same issues apply at Silverstone. I just use Monaco as the example because it is an extreme example with many of it's "curbs" being barriers. Ok, so apologies for this string of quotes and replies. Quote:
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I will try to shut up on this topic. I think I have voiced my displeasure enough. I frankly am not really upset about it. I am more interested in potential solutions than arguing details as to the cause. Apologies if my forceful arguments came across as unfriendly as well. Richard Last edited by Richard C; 13 Oct 2023 at 13:21. |
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13 Oct 2023, 13:44 (Ref:4181267) | #36 | ||
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Richard, you make the valid point that the drivers do not actually have to see where the edge of the track is because they should already have that planted firmly in their minds - I mean, what is the point of drivers doing track walks if not to understand where every things is? - and this is an argument that I have had in various threads concerning our BTCC saloons.
A few of the tracks that these cars race at have tyre stacks at known track limit problems, usually chicanes. Unfortunately, if hit, they cause damage to the cars, but what I have tried to explain is that these stack are static - they don't jump out to catch out the unwary, so the drivers are, or should be, fully aware of them. But they all drive so close to them that it doesn't take long for them to be hit, often by multiple cars in one incident because following drivers, rather than driving their own race, are totally focused on the car/s in front of them. |
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13 Oct 2023, 14:54 (Ref:4181277) | #37 | ||
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13 Oct 2023, 15:04 (Ref:4181279) | #38 | ||||
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To pivot this away from cause to solution. I am going to copy-n-paste text from my response to Teretonga in the Qatar race thread. It is about solutions for geofencing ("virtual walls" is the term Teretonga used) and how circuit limit violations could be automatically detected and maybe even with some future method of immediate penalties that provide more of a deterrent than the current solution. I do mention that all of this is not trivial to implement. I think someone mentioned "pressure pads" in this thread. I think that fits into my option #2. Quote:
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13 Oct 2023, 15:27 (Ref:4181280) | #39 | ||
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surely stamina, endurance, physical exertion, hydration levels etc etc all also play a part in a driver being able to handle the rigors of a race/track limits. even in less physically taxing sports with far more recognizably marked playing surfaces, athletes struggle with staying in bounds on onside. this is such a common thing in sport.
and if one applies stricter, more extreme draconian measures to curb certain unwanted behaviour (particularly unwanted behaviour that are relatively minor infringements in nature) this can then potentially lead to a solution that is far less acceptable and enjoyable to watch than the unwanted behaviour you are trying to curb in the first place. i'll add that in my experience, stricter punishments are not necessarily the deterrent many think they are, often being more offensive to the observer (us the viewers in this case) than the recidivist (the drivers). however, even if one does not agree with that statement, a larger and more practical issue still exists...that if you apply draconian measures to curb minor infractions, then what to you dole out for major infractions? do we now have to reorder the entire punishment sphere as well? if you DQ someone for a track limit violation then what do you do to a driver who misses a corner and takes out another competitor? a multiple race suspension? do i think that it should be easier to monitor these situations in real time (literally thousands of camera feeds and angles now days and i suspect some sort of software designed to help monitor this in real time is already in place) and hand out minor time penalties accordingly and quickly? of course i do and am happy this is largely what we have in place now. i dont see the need to change it. certainly do not see the need to make it more extreme. i hate penalties, i hate when the refs take it upon themselves to alter or amend the natural flow of a sporting event. so how much more rigid does the system have to be? how much reactionary behaviour do we want from the officials? how many millions of dollars do venues have to spend in order to appease perceived outrage caused by minor infractions like going out of bounds or even something specific to multiple issues that happened to coalesce around one outlier event? i dont watch sports to so i can see what the refs are doing! |
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13 Oct 2023, 15:45 (Ref:4181283) | #40 | ||
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But are they such minor infringements when they happen so often? What do you do when drivers are incapable of applying the discipline to drive on the actual circuit? Just ignore it and let them do it? Then you effectively 'punish' those who actually drive where they're supposed to. That's far more nonsensical, surely?
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13 Oct 2023, 16:02 (Ref:4181287) | #41 | |||
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nonsensical for me would be to apply a regressive or zero tolerance approach to penalties particularly in the case of minor infractions. |
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13 Oct 2023, 16:08 (Ref:4181289) | #42 | |||
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But the whole point of this thread is because the drivers don't seem to be taking this seriously. And in my mind, taking a short cut or something that makes their way through a corner quicker because they go beyond the track limit is cheating. And you can't just say it's a little bit of cheating; a cheating is cheating, whether little or larger! |
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13 Oct 2023, 16:08 (Ref:4181290) | #43 | |||
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lets say an average race is 60 laps competed by 20 drivers each experiencing on average 15 corners a lap. 60*20*15 = 18k corners taken in a race. so even if there are 1200 infractions (not sure if that was over an entire weekend or just the race mind you), thats was still less than 10% of all corners taken over the course of that race. so even when it looks to be happening a lot, is it really happening that much? |
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13 Oct 2023, 16:19 (Ref:4181292) | #44 | |||
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but that aside you cant be suggesting that the penalty for going out of bounds (a little cheating in your words) should be the same as intentionally ramming another car off the road (a lot of cheating) because 'cheating is cheating'? if so, you basically just ended every sporting competition before it even starts. there are nuances to this thing otherwise there would only be one punishment for everything...expulsion from the event. and even if i agreed with that logic, im not going to kill the goose for it. |
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13 Oct 2023, 16:29 (Ref:4181293) | #45 | ||
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chilli, by going out of bounds, as you say, is classified as gaining an unfair advantage; that in my book, at least, is cheating.
You say you don't like sport being interrupted, but you overlook that in soccer, football or rugby,every time that the ball goes over the line, the referee stops play and gives the other team control of the ball. Surely that is stopping the flow of the game? Or do you think that that is such a minor infraction that the ref should just say "Play on"? And you cannot differentiate between a little cheat and a larger one. What would you say if one engine supplier just bored out the engine by a few mill, so that it added up to an extra 50cc; that's only a little, so let it go. Or the recent clamping down on flexi wings; in the whole scheme of things, it was only a tiny amount of advantage so let it go! Last edited by Mike Harte; 13 Oct 2023 at 16:34. |
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13 Oct 2023, 16:54 (Ref:4181299) | #46 | |||
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That is one aspect but primarily the reason was to discus/examine the effectiveness of penalties, regarding track limitations. Despite penalties being imposed on drivers, they aren't preventing drivers from exceeding track limits. In your post #13, you say, ''the way to deal with track limits and similar infringements is to introduce penalties that are so severe that drivers won't want to risk getting one.'' I personally think that is the way forward. So in what form would the penalty take and how would it be implemented, so that drivers won't want to risk getting one? Currently, drivers receive two warnings before they are shown a black and a white flag for a third warning. If the regulations are flouted for a fourth time, a five-second time penalty is awarded. |
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13 Oct 2023, 17:14 (Ref:4181303) | #47 | |||||
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a throw in or side out of bounds is then a procedural event with no penalties being applied because those sorts of infractions are not considered cheating. Quote:
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13 Oct 2023, 17:24 (Ref:4181305) | #48 | ||
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Just do small loops on and off the circuit right at the start finish timing loop and ignore the rest of the circuit. Your lap times will be very small and you should win a race in just minutes. You are technically going out of bounds by not following the majority of the circuit. (I am not sure this would work in practice given the potential for the timing loop to extend wide enough to prevent this, but the concept should illustrate the point. I also generally agree with Mike on this. There are valid reasons for going off the circuit, but doing so to gain an advantage is cheating.) Richard |
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13 Oct 2023, 17:42 (Ref:4181313) | #49 | ||
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Bj, I would suggest that the drivers get only one warning and the next time, even if it happens at a different part of the circuit, the driver is given an automatic drive through. If further transgressions happen, the driver has to take a stop and go at the end of the pits without stopping at their garage for tyres for say 10 seconds and that stop time increases if it happens again.
If the track limit abuse happens on the penultimate or last lap, then a time equivalent of a drive through, or stop and go, to be added to the finishing time of the driver. I would like to think that the team bosses would stop their drivers abusing limits after they see just one driver from any of the teams receiving this penalty. |
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13 Oct 2023, 17:49 (Ref:4181314) | #50 | ||
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chilli, there is a penalty to the team that kicks a ball over the line because the opposing team then gets control of the ball; that's the penalty. In soccer, a team will be given a free kick if the opposing team member handles the ball, even if it was unintentional.
There are loads of rules in all forms of sport for even the most minor of infractions; just for example, if a sprinter strays out of his lane by just a few millimetres, he or she will be automatically disqualified, even if he/she doesn't impede a fellow competitor. |
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