Grumpy Kerb

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Grumpy Kerb

Grumpy Kerb

@GrumpyKerb

F1 scholar. Mid 1990s supremacist.

가입일 Nisan 2024
36 팔로잉51 팔로워
Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@MV33Racing You can shove shit under his nose and he'll still say it smells like roses. A world-class politician.
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MV33Racing🏎
MV33Racing🏎@MV33Racing·
This is so hilarious. Toto Wolff is trying to convince the journalists of "pure and exciting racing", but they were left speechless in disbelief. 😭
MV33Racing🏎 tweet media
This is Formula 1@ThisIsFormu1a1

🚨| Wolff: “this F1 is pure racing. seeing one driver recharging and the other using energy is exciting”: — Toto Wolff expressed his enthusiasm for the new Formula 1 regulations, highlighting the excitement of strategic energy management during races. Speaking to media, Wolff remarked: “Formula 1 is changing and is becoming pure racing. Seeing one pilot recharging energy and the other using it is very exciting. Let's talk about a science of racing that is developing and is in the hands of drivers. But maybe Max and the others preferred the rules of last year, when here in Suzuka we hardly saw overtaking.” — Wolff attempted to engage journalists on the topic of race aesthetics, receiving a muted response. He commented: “Nobody can complain about the lack of beauty of the races. Do you agree or not?” — In response to the silence, Wolff added: “Only conservatives and traditionalists and those who live in the past may not like it.” — Despite his satisfaction with the current state of racing, Wolff acknowledged areas for improvement, particularly in qualifying sessions: “For me, the race is not a problem, we have to work on qualifying and we will do it in London on April 9.” #toto #mercedesf1 #f1racing 🇬🇧 VIA: [formulapassion]

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brakeboosted
brakeboosted@brakeboosted·
A lot of things are being put under the "deployment issue" umbrella, and it's unsurprising that not everyone understands how complicated the power demand rules are. This isn't an "issue" in the usual sense of the word, but rather oddities in the regulations being exposed by the near 50/50 power split. Sometimes, the way the driver uses the throttle pedal induces "deployment issues." We already saw what happened when a moment that usually proves inconsequential ruined Leclerc's SQ3 lap in China. In this case, Hadjar, who is lifting through 130R to manage tyres, is affected by the quirks of the power demand rules. The MGU-K must give at least 200 kW of electrical power for 1 second when he goes from lifting to beyond 98% throttle. Throttle position >98% is defined as the power-limited pending period. What accentuates the issues for Isack here, is that from 130R to Casio Triangle - where cars typically harvest when not attacking - instead of recovering energy, it spends an extra couple seconds deploying it. He is left completely exposed on the subsequent straight because it used energy when it was supposed to recover it. It's easy to fix in this case. Don't lift on the next laps. Where it becomes tricky is when the driver uses the throttle in a way that doesn't necessarily help the "issue" due to their driving habits, or trying to push a little harder at some points. It's precisely this thats frustrating so many drivers. Because they don't really know they're doing something "wrong." The reason its become such a prominent aspect is because of the need to have 100% optimal deployment all the time, the product of a 50/50 power split.
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Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@ESPNF1 How ironic that the guy who has been shilling for these regs became an indirect victim of them. Lol.
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ESPN F1
ESPN F1@ESPNF1·
George Russell laments safety car timing after fourth-place finish
ESPN F1 tweet media
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Delta Data
Delta Data@DeltaData_·
Come on mate, this must be a joke. You accuse us of pushing an agenda when you only ever share post-race pace analyses when Hamilton wins? You know perfectly well that doing this kind of analysis is complex. There are hundreds of external factors which, in many cases, simply cannot be controlled, especially with these new regulations, where it seems that every driver has some sort of mechanical issue at some point during the weekend, and finding out about all of them is practically impossible. We analyse each lap individually and publish the results every race weekend, regardless of who comes out looking better or worse. We never try to lecture anyone about anything because we make it clear that, in this sport, data should always be taken with a pinch of salt, and we always point out that it should never be treated as the absolute truth. We have no problem correcting any mistakes we make and we are always willing to learn and improve our analysis. But rather than criticising us without even mentioning us, it would have been far more useful if you had taken the time to message us privately about all this. We also listened to Bottas’ comments and he didn’t make any particularly relevant remarks. We checked the telemetry from some of his laps and compared it with Checo’s, and it even seemed as though Pérez was losing more power towards the end of the straights. Could Bottas have had an issue? Of course that’s entirely possible. And if we had seen any indication of it anywhere, we would have pointed it out. But making an accusation with the intention of trying to discredit our work over a case like this isn’t particularly honest on your part, especially when, on the occasions we have disagreed with any of your data, we have always raised it with you privately and respectfully, without undermining your work in any way.
Udi@FormulaPace

Can’t expect much in terms of context from these lot but here’s what really happened: Bottas clearly had some kind of issue in the 1st stint (was doing high 38s on the Hards when others were in the high 37s). I’d suspect due to Hard tyres + high fuel + cold = massive graining which is what we saw. Perez’s medium stint was in the mid-high 37s around half a second quicker than the Astons behind both on Mediums. Bottas’ medium stint was lapping in the mid-high 36s whereas the Astons in the low 37s both on Mediums. Applying fuel-correction (0.03s) once again confirms Bottas and Perez being equal on the Mediums. On the Hards however, Bottas was 2-3s slower than anyone else which is clearly not representative pace. 1 week ago, Bottas finished 20s ahead and outqualified Checo by 1.5s but nothing was said. Focusing on drivers in the slowest car for a team who aren’t at the level of any other is a new level of cope and damage control. Using unrepresentative laps 2-3s off the pace just to push a silly agenda about Hamilton is an all-time low

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Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@F1BigData @Monascope7 Time to open the champagne. The worse it gets, the better. The FIA and Liberty will have to make changes.
Grumpy Kerb tweet media
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Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@F1 David Croft whenever there's a mushroom overtake.
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Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@Versutta Don't know about these regs, but Wolff hadn't designed the 2014 ones, 'cause when they were approved in 2011, he was at Williams.
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Sub/Sutta
Sub/Sutta@Versutta·
Yes, he did, just like back in 2014. For 2026, Audi wanted a front MGU-K, but Toto shut it down, even though it would have made energy recovery under braking far more efficient and avoided this excessive super clipping phenomena. Now we're stuck in this mess.
V F1@swiftsambi

@FormulaUR_ That pure bait Toto didn’t design the regs

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ESPN F1
ESPN F1@ESPNF1·
🎙️"Lando, did you enjoy that?" Lando🗣️: "Pffff, you shouldn’t have started with that question..."
ESPN F1 tweet media
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Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@F1BigData If they nerf the mushroom, then there will be less yo-yo battles, and overtaking in general. It will lose its intended purpose. Lol.
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Holiness
Holiness@F1BigData·
Carlos Sainz on Bearman's accident: "This break is good for F1. The accident we saw today was something the drivers had been warning the FIA and FOM about; it was just a matter of time. We're reaching speed differencials of 40-50 km/h using boost, and this accident was inevitable I hope Formula 1 reconsiders its position, because it is clear that these regulations have loopholes and problems that need to be addressed before going to Miami"
Holiness tweet media
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Grumpy Kerb 리트윗함
bagadbilla
bagadbilla@tiredbilla·
Hope you are alright @OllieBearman, and it's nothing too serious. 🙏
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Motorsport
Motorsport@Motorsport·
Oscar Piastri to Charles Leclerc watching Bearman’s crash: “I finally see what you mean about the mushroom.”
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Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@F1BigData A fitting picture. Wheel-to-wheel, Russell is closer to Bottas than to Leclerc.
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Holiness
Holiness@F1BigData·
Charles Leclerc overtaking around the outside of Turn 1 in Suzuka
Holiness tweet media
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Grumpy Kerb
Grumpy Kerb@GrumpyKerb·
@cytrusf1 Seems logical. They're not gonna shoot themselves in the dick. Publicly.
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Cytrus 🍋
Cytrus 🍋@cytrusf1·
Feels like FIA won't investigate the crash because they'll have to put in writing that the harvest vs deploy speed is dangerous...
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MV33Racing🏎
MV33Racing🏎@MV33Racing·
Wow Charles, what a fvking overtake 🤩
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