Skip to main content

The F1 rule that gave Russell Canadian GP pole despite Verstappen tie

Qualifying in Montreal produced a historic moment when Russell and Verstappen set exactly the same time in Q3, a 1m12.000s, that left them tied but gave pole to the Mercedes driver.What happens when two F1 drivers set the same lap time in qualifying?The fourth paragraph of article 39.4 of the FIA F1 Sporting Regulations states: “If two or more drivers set identical times during Q1, Q2 or Q3 or ...Keep reading

from Autosport.com - All - Stories https://ift.tt/w5Ddm14
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The can of worms opened by Hamilton and Leclerc’s F1 US GP disqualifications

Having fallen just 2.2 seconds behind Austin race winner Max Verstappen, Mercedes racer Hamilton plus sixth-placed Leclerc were then thrown out for running with excessively worn floor planks.They had contravened the FIA Technical Regulations which states that the plank assembly measured at designated holes can only wear by 1mm down to 9mm across a weekend.With their rear skids deemed illegal, the ... Keep reading from Autosport.com - All - Stories https://ift.tt/OwNJ94p via IFTTT

President’s Budget Proposes Selling Half of National Petroleum Reserve

- Following up on sales set in motion by the Department of Energy  at the end of the Obama administration, President Trump has proposed in his budget to begin selling oil from the  U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve next year. After a decade of domestic production increases brought about by the shale-drilling boom, the country’s reliance on imported oil has fallen, decreasing the need to maintain the  688-million-barrel, 141-day supply at its current level, the administration said. - The Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR)—the largest emergency petroleum supply in the world—is stored in four underground cavern complexes on the Gulf coasts of Louisiana and Texas. It was created in 1975 in response to the oil embargo by member nations in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in 1973–1974. In the years since, it has been used a handful of times to stabilize oil prices during emergencies—notably in 1991 during Operation Desert Storm and in 2005 after Hurricane Katrina. T