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14 Jun 2004, 13:21 (Ref:1003580) | #51 | ||
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Welcome QuickSilver - and thanks for the mental image...
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14 Jun 2004, 13:33 (Ref:1003593) | #52 | ||
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Shame for Williams/Ralf but I'm sure McLaren are happy to have both cars in the points.
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14 Jun 2004, 13:34 (Ref:1003596) | #53 | |
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True.
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14 Jun 2004, 13:43 (Ref:1003604) | #54 | |||
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Furthermore, is it posisble that Massa's suspension failed because of the load going through the rear brakes? Remember also that Ralf had brake problems irrespective of their legality, so the advantage may not have been major. Past incidents of a car being illegal but not increased in perforamcne because of it have only seen Constructor points docked (eg Austria 2000 and Brazil 1995) |
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14 Jun 2004, 13:51 (Ref:1003615) | #55 | |
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As far as I know, because of the parc ferme situation between qualifying and the race, the cars are only fully scrutineered for legality at the end of the race.
Therefore, the FIA wouldn't be pointing out problems before hand. |
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14 Jun 2004, 13:54 (Ref:1003622) | #56 | |||
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14 Jun 2004, 14:44 (Ref:1003669) | #57 | |||
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I think constructors points are deducted if the car breaks the regs due to wear and tear during the race, but in this case I think the assumption is that all the cars involved started in an illegal config (ie deliberately breaking the rules) - happy to be corrected on this assumption. Last edited by neil_davidson2; 14 Jun 2004 at 14:48. |
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14 Jun 2004, 14:50 (Ref:1003675) | #58 | ||
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Whether they were DELIBERATELY breaking the rules are not is another issue, but on that ultimately doesn't matter - as they were rightly DQed anyway. |
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14 Jun 2004, 14:50 (Ref:1003676) | #59 | |||
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14 Jun 2004, 14:59 (Ref:1003683) | #60 | |
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In Toyota's case, Mike Gascoyne is saying the offending part was just three millimetres out - and that it was a problem with the manufacturing tolerances.
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14 Jun 2004, 15:05 (Ref:1003686) | #61 | ||
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Does anyone know if there are any tolerances written into the regs on these components? I seem to recall that when the McLarens nose dropped they tried to claim that it was only out by 2mm, and it turned out that they were outside the 3mm allowed tolerance and not the stated reg by 2mm so they were therefore out by 5mm in total.
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14 Jun 2004, 15:25 (Ref:1003705) | #62 | |||
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14 Jun 2004, 15:41 (Ref:1003719) | #63 | ||||
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14 Jun 2004, 15:48 (Ref:1003725) | #64 | |
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Rules arte rules and Williams and Toyota have to be disqualified if their cars are not within the rules. No question.
I also said that about the 1999 bargeboard fiasco though, and look what happened there....... |
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14 Jun 2004, 17:42 (Ref:1003807) | #65 | |
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Those who say this was done deliberately "in the hope it wouldn't be noticed" have obviously never seen what happens in the post-race technical checks. Very rigorous.
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14 Jun 2004, 18:28 (Ref:1003865) | #66 | |||
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Quite frankly i do see it as a silly rule. I don't see what harm it is to have better cooling on your brakes...after all brakes taht dont' fail are SAFE!!! Anyhew, they claim it didn't give them a performance advantage which i'm not so sure about. Montoya was surely braking WAY late into those corners when pressuring Schumi and it didn't look like he was going to back off much either. But rules are rules. It's disturbing to see someone you root for run illegal machinery, but in all fairness it they break the rules, they gotta pay the price just like everyone else....w/ the exception of Benneton. Last edited by dcp2685; 14 Jun 2004 at 18:28. |
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14 Jun 2004, 18:29 (Ref:1003871) | #67 | |||
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14 Jun 2004, 20:52 (Ref:1004028) | #68 | ||
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Will it spur him on at Indy or will it get him down??
Personally though, I don't think Ralf is that sensitive, he should go ok as long as he doesn't back it into Juan like he did 2 years ago |
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14 Jun 2004, 23:07 (Ref:1004149) | #69 | |
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why wasnt its picked up on friday practice? scrutineering before the event?>?
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14 Jun 2004, 23:42 (Ref:1004168) | #70 | |||
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Or when previously the rules had a ride height limit to counter the high cornering speeds that the teams got from running ground effects. The cars would be measured before and after the race for a 6 cm ground clearance, but during the race the cars would be lowered either hydraulically or through some fancy method involving two stage springs. There was a story that Nelson Piquet turned up with his Brabham at scrutineering, with a big lever in the cockpit. "What's that for?" "It's a handbrake - look." Lever is pulled, car dumps onto ground, sealing skirts to surface. "Look, you can't move it now!" That's why the plank is such a great idea. The teams can do what they want for ride height, but if that plank ain't right after the race they're out. The car should be legal after the race, if not before. If it's not legal after, then it wasn't legal during. I have faith that the FIA have good grounds for limiting the brake duct size. It's just that our imagination doesn't stretch as far as that of those race engineers... Last edited by Heebeegeetee; 14 Jun 2004 at 23:46. |
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15 Jun 2004, 00:14 (Ref:1004189) | #71 | ||
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I think i feel very sorry for Ralf..he had a terrible year so far, yet just when he could make an impression, it's tainted with such incidents. And i believe he has the right to feel upset with Williams for it.
I wasn't giving this breach of rules much thought until some of the posters gave some pretty probable arguments. And now, i do think that the people who installed/approved the parts knew it beforehand that the parts were outside the regulations..which is a shame. Quote:"I always feel that, if a car's legal at the start of the race, it's legal full stop." I can't say i agree with this statement. So does that mean if a car is legal at the start, he pits at the first pitstop and make some illegal mods to the car, then it's still legal? Quote K-B:"Those who say this was done deliberately "in the hope it wouldn't be noticed" have obviously never seen what happens in the post-race technical checks. Very rigorous." Surprisingly, "very rigorous" as it is,it did not stop anti-Ferrari critics from MAKING UP accusations and allegations of Ferrari cheating... I'm quite amused that Williams/Toyota gets so much sympathy and muted disapproval for being caught cheating when Ferrari could get worse bashing for nothing. But i must agree with K-B, i have faith in the system of checks FIA carry out during the weekend to check for the legality of the cars. It's very rigourous and systematic, and hence, i hope this incident would go one step to squash all those false allegations made against Ferrari. I'm disappointed that Williams/Toyota are involved but i guess the pressure to perform must be really huge. This follows Peugeot's recent case in the Rallying...a disappointing trend. What i'm more amused is that they try to pass it off as no performance gain... Sure, it may not shave half a second off a lap time, but it let's the car go at the optimal pace for more laps... Anyway, for teams with such huge reputation, i doubt if they're innocent (or no performance gain) they'd keep quiet and accept punishment meekly. Somebody mentioned about other technical infringements are found but not exposed, and i find strange that neither FIA, Williams/Toyota gave much details about the brake infringement...are they trying to cover something - perhaps FIA disqualified Williams/Toyota for just one of the minor infringement, keep quiet about the others, and in exchange Toyota/Williams just accept the punishment without appeal? Just a thought, because i'm quite curious as to why a company as big/rich like Toyota would not challenge a DQ-dicision. :confused: But anyway, personally IMO, while it affects the image of Williams and Toyota, and punishment is due to the teams,i think that the infringement is not the driver's fault and being a marginal breach, the drivers should at least keep half the points they scored. |
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15 Jun 2004, 01:59 (Ref:1004220) | #72 | ||
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Cheating is nothing new. If done properly it wins races. The GT 40 had blocks in the front springs that were removed during the race via a cable in the cockpit to work around ride hight regs in the lemans. This worked out well for ford. Some one mentioned nascar, that is a cheating contest that is fun to watch. Having said all this can I saifly assume that it was no accident that illegal cooling ducts were fitted for Canada?
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15 Jun 2004, 03:05 (Ref:1004236) | #73 | ||
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According to this http://f1.racing-live.com/en/headlin...14021453.shtml it looks like Toyota wanted to appeal, but didn't make it in time.... I don't understand how it's possible to miss such a deadline, maybe it's just a bad excuse. Atleased Williams accepted that their car didn't conform to the rules.
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15 Jun 2004, 03:16 (Ref:1004238) | #74 | |||
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15 Jun 2004, 03:40 (Ref:1004248) | #75 | ||
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according to head of michelin racing pierre dupasquere (i butchered his name i know) the rule was put in place after people began using the airducts and there shape/position as aero aids as opposed to cooling ducts....given the tight regulations on the front ends then the rule seems perfectly reasonable in that respect with the constant efforts to control downforce
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