TomTom94
Well-Known Member
210+ i believe.
Right, my own silly f1 question. Would it be acceptable to steal Vettel's red bull, and run James Murdoch over in it?
Morally yes, legally no.
210+ i believe.
Right, my own silly f1 question. Would it be acceptable to steal Vettel's red bull, and run James Murdoch over in it?
What sort of top speeds were the cars pulling before they scrapped the old hockenheim?
210+ i believe.
Right, my own silly f1 question. Would it be acceptable to steal Vettel's red bull, and run James Murdoch over in it?
What would happen if Vettel broke his finger this year and couldnt race? Would the replacement have the number 1 car or 0?
How does DRS detection work? Does it know which car number is behind another? Could it be used so as to enable DRS if a car is within a second of the same car it was within a second of on the previous lap?
Wikipedia just told me that John Player Specials cigarettes are still manufactured. If Ferrari had to remove their barcode logo because it was too similar to Marlboro branding why are Lotus permitted to run in JPS colours?
Braking.Potentially stupid question (not sure if this has already been asked without going through all 8 pages so apologies in advanced if it has).
What exactly is it that causes a lock up of wheels?
Wikipedia just told me that John Player Specials cigarettes are still manufactured. If Ferrari had to remove their barcode logo because it was too similar to Marlboro branding why are Lotus permitted to run in JPS colours?
Braking.Potentially stupid question (not sure if this has already been asked without going through all 8 pages so apologies in advanced if it has).
What exactly is it that causes a lock up of wheels?
Lotus changed the gold colour on the car to a creamy yellow to get round the loophole of looking like a 200mph box of ***s.
I am not sure about Pirelli's 2012 specification tyres but certainly in 2011, they were less durable than the Bridgestones. However, the 'damage' we are discussing here is that caused entirely by braking; i.e. susceptibility to flat-spotting. Bearing in mind that the inside front tyre is 'unloaded' whilst braking on turn-in, I would expect the differences in vulnerability between the manufacturers to be negligible, particularly when one considers that flat-spotting a harder compound tends to be more permanent; thus somewhat off-setting the extra wear experienced with softer rubber.It was the case with the Bridgestones that locking up the inside front wasn't much of a problem, and this was a noticeable feature of Hamilton's attacking style. Are the Pirelli tyres more susceptible to greater damage on the inside front?
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Excellent idea for a thread Genji! Now, to the answer to your question...
Cosi? Where are you, you should know this!...