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- TenEightyOne
- TenEightyOne
Go check out the race thread.
This. And a few posts up from this too.
Go check out the race thread.
If the full story came out, [Stepney and Coughlan] are two minor players and there are people who are not minor players. But the full story will probably never come out.
Not sure this qualifies as a conspiracy, but it's disgusting just the same:
http://autoweek.com/article/monster...car-refuses-recognize-bobby-allisons-1971-win
What's the deal with NASCAR allowing encumbered wins to stand anyway? I know that in the 90's, they'd place any offending car right in the rear of the finishing order.
Does seem quite a shame to not give it to Allison when it's counted for others, it'd be like denying any F1 car that ran the Indy 500 when it was allowed historical victory. Because it was an F1 car.
It seems to hinge on the unresolvable claim that the drivers always knew their non-cup cars wouldn't be eligible for a win. That said it's a real shame. In fact, it stinks.
It's not much of a 'conspiracy' as there was no intent to harm or murder but people do believe the Senna steering arm hypothesis.
I was idly reading bits of Damon Hill's autobiography recently, just the time periods I was interested in whilst I had time to kill in a book shop. When reading the section about Imola 1994, he goes into some detail about how he believes Senna simply lost control of the car; Hill quotes the venturi effect and says that in his opinion Senna's car bottomed out and lost grip, and that when correcting the slide the car regained grip and snapped back the other way and off the circuit.
The reason he gives that it couldn't be a broken steering arm is that whilst back in the garage awaiting the second start of the race, after Lamy and Lehto's start line accident, Hill and his engineer both agreed to turn off the Williams' power steering. Hill acknowledged the known problems with the initial FW16 and the modifications made to the steering arm to make the drivers more comfortable and states that if his steering arm could withstand 53 laps of intense load without any power steering, there isn't any way that Senna's steering arm could have failed given that Senna's car still had power steering.
Additionally, Hill says that the modifications made to Imola played a factor in Senna losing control. In an attempt to smoothen the track, the engineers who worked on Imola actually made the track bumpier on the inside of Tamburello. Hill says he and some other drivers took the slightly longer and slower outside line, an extra few tenths per lap, because it was smoother and didn't result in the car buffeting up and down as much. Senna stuck to the inside line and the bumpier surface was one of the reasons given for the car bottoming out, resulting in the mentioned venturi effect.
Lastly, Hill cites that a steering arm failure would result not in a loss of grip but in a total loss of steering control and this does not match up with the evidence and footage available. Had the steering arm broken, Senna's hands and wheel would have reacted far differently than they did.
I thought it made for very interesting reading.
True. But Newey also admits partial responsibility, since he designed a car that was aerodynamically unstable, and also bore some responsibility for the fact the steering column was weakened and cracked, the steering wheel itself departing company from the car during the accident.Newey says pretty much the same thing in "How to Build a Racing Car", a book that's well worth reading.
He also recounts Senna's firm opinion that Schumacher's car was sporting traction control
It's not much of a 'conspiracy' as there was no intent to harm or murder but people do believe the Senna steering arm hypothesis.
I was idly reading bits of Damon Hill's autobiography recently, just the time periods I was interested in whilst I had time to kill in a book shop. When reading the section about Imola 1994, he goes into some detail about how he believes Senna simply lost control of the car; Hill quotes the venturi effect and says that in his opinion Senna's car bottomed out and lost grip, and that when correcting the slide the car regained grip and snapped back the other way and off the circuit.
The reason he gives that it couldn't be a broken steering arm is that whilst back in the garage awaiting the second start of the race, after Lamy and Lehto's start line accident, Hill and his engineer both agreed to turn off the Williams' power steering. Hill acknowledged the known problems with the initial FW16 and the modifications made to the steering arm to make the drivers more comfortable and states that if his steering arm could withstand 53 laps of intense load without any power steering, there isn't any way that Senna's steering arm could have failed given that Senna's car still had power steering.
Additionally, Hill says that the modifications made to Imola played a factor in Senna losing control. In an attempt to smoothen the track, the engineers who worked on Imola actually made the track bumpier on the inside of Tamburello. Hill says he and some other drivers took the slightly longer and slower outside line, an extra few tenths per lap, because it was smoother and didn't result in the car buffeting up and down as much. Senna stuck to the inside line and the bumpier surface was one of the reasons given for the car bottoming out, resulting in the mentioned venturi effect.
An interesting quote from Newey in 2011: "The honest truth is that no one will ever know exactly what happened. There's no doubt the steering column failed and the big question was whether it failed in the accident or did it cause the accident? It had fatigue cracks and would have failed at some point. There is no question that its design was very poor. However, all the evidence suggests the car did not go off the track as a result of steering column failure... If you look at the camera shots, especially from Michael Schumacher's following car, the car didn't understeer off the track. It oversteered which is not consistent with a steering column failure. The rear of the car stepped out and all the data suggests that happened. Ayrton then corrected that by going to 50% throttle which would be consistent with trying to reduce the rear stepping out and then, half-a-second later, he went hard on the brakes. The question then is why did the rear step out? The car bottomed much harder on that second lap which again appears to be unusual because the tyre pressure should have come up by then – which leaves you expecting that the right rear tyre probably picked up a puncture from debris on the track. If I was pushed into picking out a single most likely cause that would be it."
In many ways I can feel sorry for Masi. 2 petulant children going at you in the radio in a high pressure situation with other things going on as well. Regardless of what he did it would have been deemed the wrong call.Michael Masi had way too much pressure on him from both sides and ended up making one of the dumbest calls of all time because of it.
My favorite conspiracy was that Latifi was secretly on RB's payroll and crashed on purpose, teamLH never ceases to amaze me.
This is really open to interpretation.
It's only die hard LH fans claiming anything like that.How many times have people claimed Lewis Hamilton's Mercedes is being sabotaged in recent times now?
Not that I believe that because I don't!
Exactly!It's only die hard LH fans claiming anything like that.
The bizarre thing with the Mercedes bashing that CultLH is going for, is the notion that they might ne favouring Russell, well, yeah of course they're favouring Russell at times, because he is still racing for Mercedes next season. Hamilton to some degree was never going to get 100% equal footing with the Ferrari move done and dusted.
But to claim that he's being sabotaged is just dumb.