I remember for some American sporting event they played the Hawaii Five-O theme accidentally. WIN!

I remember for some American sporting event they played the Hawaii Five-O theme accidentally. WIN!

I'm not sure if your question is a rhetorical expression of frustrated disbelief, Westy, but in my opinion the reason is a combination of fear of change (better the devil you know) and simple greed (Ecclestone is perceived to be responsible for attracting so much money to the sport and the teams have reaped significant financial benefits from his approach), with a touch of apathy (rather him than me). How much of massive increase in interest in Formula 1 is down to Ecclestone and how much is down to changes in society and leisure activities is impossible to quantify. Insiders seem to give Ecclestone a lot of credit for dragging the sport up to its current global position. As an outsider I can't help but feel that a lot of that credit is undeserved and the increase in global interest would have happened anyway, if not to the extent it has.Considering that Bernie seems to be ever dragging the sport into new depths of despair, how is it that he is still in charge? I understand he makes money but does anyone involved in the sport ever take the longview?
…I also think those involved in running the sport have very short term ambitions that revolve around their own personal involvement, which is something Ecclestone has capitalised on.
Thought I'd drag this thread back to the top with another question...
Why are the front tyres thinner than the rear tyres? Presumably, a thinner front tyre means less grip which results in understeer. However, considering all the problems with slipstreaming and following in a cars wake, surely more grip would be beneficial?

Thought I'd drag this thread back to the top with another question...
Why are the front tyres thinner than the rear tyres? Presumably, a thinner front tyre means less grip which results in understeer. However, considering all the problems with slipstreaming and following in a cars wake, surely more grip would be beneficial?


.... Is the pit lane speed limit enforced by a man with a speed gun? Or maybe a timing loop? or even just using the in car data?
There must be a way they enforce it all the way down the pit lane too (surely).
I have a question?
Why do Mclaren not put their name or logo on either their car or team-kit?
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See.
Nowhere does it say "Mclaren" or have the red swerve logo.
I have a question?
Why do Mclaren not put their name or logo on either their car or team-kit?
You must log in or register to see images
You must log in or register to see images
See.
Nowhere does it say "Mclaren" or have the red swerve logo?
it's right at the front of the nose cone http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?q=Mc...tart=0&ndsp=20&ved=1t:429,r:3,s:0&tx=43&ty=97
beat me to itHow much do the driver's really know about how their cars work and how it's features affect it's performance?