- Nico Rosberg will reach 200 Grands Prix this weekend, as will Scuderia Toro Rosso. - Haas confirm that they have their final 2016 update planned for this race. - Will there be any driver confirmations for next year this weekend? Who even knows?
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Grosjean with a session-ending issue shortly after the start of Practice 1, and then a problem with the car which caused a session-ending crash into the barrier in Practice 2. It's a good thing he's raced at this track before, because he's had next-to-no driving on the track this weekend.
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Rob Dylan wrote:Grosjean with a session-ending issue shortly after the start of Practice 1, and then a problem with the car which caused a session-ending crash into the barrier in Practice 2. It's a good thing he's raced at this track before, because he's had next-to-no driving on the track this weekend.
It doesn't seem to be doing much for his confidence though - he sounded pretty downbeat after his problems in those sessions, as well as being pretty pessimistic about the overall performance of the car.
Whilst he started out quite strongly at the start of the year, as Haas have slipped back as their development focus has shifted ever more towards 2017, Grosjean has become more frustrated and error prone as the season has worn on. The first session might not have been his fault, but I get the feeling that this is not going to be a particularly strong weekend for Grosjean given how he seems to have let those issues affect his mental state.
Martin Brundle, on watching a replay of Grosjean spinning: "The problem with Grosjean is that he want to take a look back at the corner he's just exited"
Bet he didn't pay the entrance fee. Bernie had best get on that.
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
I don't care about ROTR, Vettel's anti-roll bar is already Reject of the Weekend for costing me €15.
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rosberg's lap time 1.42.58 is the fastest ever lap time in the Singapore GP history (not under race condition)
I was scrolling through the previous race weekends from 2008. no car had ever broken the 1.43 barrier yet. these 2016 V6 cars are way way faster than the old V8s
Rosberg is hella quick this weekend. Di Resta being pretty honest on the Sky front, saying that Hamilton has just failed to get into the rhythm in the last two days. But that was probably the pole lap of Nico's career so far.
Also, bad luck for Vettel. Will be interesting to see if he can work his way through the pack, or if he gets stuck behind a train of Renaults and Haases. If there's one track other than Monaco you don't want a terrible qualifying session at, it's here.
Disappointed in McLaren's pace, tbh. Thought they would be much faster.
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
rosberg's lap time 1.42.58 is the fastest ever lap time in the Singapore GP history (not under race condition)
I was scrolling through the previous race weekends from 2008. no car had ever broken the 1.43 barrier yet. these 2016 V6 cars are way way faster than the old V8s
hootie
That's completely true, and shouldn't be that surprising. The new engines, coupled with all the energy recovery units that surround it, give out far more power than the old V8s.
It's almost as if car performance wasn't linked to the number of cylinders and decibels produced by the engine.
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rosberg's lap time 1.42.58 is the fastest ever lap time in the Singapore GP history (not under race condition)
I was scrolling through the previous race weekends from 2008. no car had ever broken the 1.43 barrier yet. these 2016 V6 cars are way way faster than the old V8s
hootie
That's completely true, and shouldn't be that surprising. The new engines, coupled with all the energy recovery units that surround it, give out far more power than the old V8s.
It's almost as if car performance wasn't linked to the number of cylinders and decibels produced by the engine.
It's also worth noting that the removal of the 'Singapore Sling' chicane has considerably brought down lap times by as much as three seconds since 2013, although the fact that these cars are challenging (unofficial) lap records is little surprise: Didn't Hamilton come within a fraction of the lap record in Spielberg?
And yes, the V6s are superior to the V8s in a number of ways; the main loss of lap time in these cars compared to their V8 era predecessors is because of aero restrictions that were brought in with the new power units in 2014.
rosberg's lap time 1.42.58 is the fastest ever lap time in the Singapore GP history (not under race condition)
I was scrolling through the previous race weekends from 2008. no car had ever broken the 1.43 barrier yet. these 2016 V6 cars are way way faster than the old V8s
hootie
That's completely true, and shouldn't be that surprising. The new engines, coupled with all the energy recovery units that surround it, give out far more power than the old V8s.
It's almost as if car performance wasn't linked to the number of cylinders and decibels produced by the engine.
It's also worth noting that the removal of the 'Singapore Sling' chicane has considerably brought down lap times by as much as three seconds since 2013, although the fact that these cars are challenging (unofficial) lap records is little surprise: Didn't Hamilton come within a fraction of the lap record in Spielberg?
And yes, the V6s are superior to the V8s in a number of ways; the main loss of lap time in these cars compared to their V8 era predecessors is because of aero restrictions that were brought in with the new power units in 2014.
Yes, you are indeed correct - Hamilton set the fastest lap of the race in the Austrian GP with a 1m08.41s lap time, which was a fraction off the all time record that Schumacher set in 2003 (1m08.34s). That is more impressive in some ways given that the removal of refuelling would work heavily against the current generation of cars (and it is the times set in race trim which define the lap records).
Simtek is right to note that Rosberg's pole lap is certainly impressive, but cannot be quite so easily compared to previous years due to the frequent modifications to the track over the year - even the minor amendments they made last year have had a noticeable effect.
Martin Brundle, on watching a replay of Grosjean spinning: "The problem with Grosjean is that he want to take a look back at the corner he's just exited"
Ferrari might have just gift wrapped yet another podium to Hamilton. It's like they're trying to purposely keep Rosberg from taking the championship lead back.
...I suck at mental math , apparently because Nico could still take the lead back even with Hamilton 3rd.
Well that was the first race I'd seen live all the way through since Hungary, so I can't tell how good it was compared to my complete under-exposure to watching F1 in the last two months. But that was definitely a good race: a genuine fight for the lead; a change in the championship lead; proper fights between drivers on-track (Kvyat and Verstappen); a sprinkling of jeopardy and issues up and down the grid. The only thing that might have improved it was the much-promised rain. But then again, hell will sooner freeze than for it to rain in Singapore during the race...
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
It was quite decent. A proper first-lap crash that we haven't seen in a few races, Verstappen getting a taste of his own medicine, Hamilton struggling (yes, he was struggling compared to Rosberg) and Räikkönen being relevant again.
Oh, and the meatball flag was actually used for once!
Eurosport broadcast for the 1990 Mexican GP prequalifying: "The Life, it looked very lifeless yet again... in fact Bruno did one, slow lap"
CoopsII wrote:A couple more laps and Ricciardo would've nailed him...
Unless Rosberg had backed off knowing it was the last lap, I'm pretty sure Ricciardo would've had him on the main straight going into Turn 1 if there was one more lap.
Ricciardo's advantage was lessening as he used up his tyres, and by the end of the race his advantage was only around a second a lap. On the final lap he caught up considerably, to the point where he was right behind Rosberg as they went over the finish line, so I could say Nico probably slowed down a little to get the car over the line.
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Great race, really enjoyed it. But hearing that drivers had to look after their brakes from the start of the race ( and risk catastrophic failure if things didnt work out, I assume) when there's enough engineering knowledge to ensure every driver has plenty of brake capacity...annoys me. Its one thing to get a performance advantage by going skinny on fuel ( and hoping for an SC , or a slow race) with the risk of running dry... it's another thing to go marginal on brake capacity.
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