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Red Bull sets a new world record......
Red Bull stationary pit stop times in Malaysia:
Red Bull set a new world record in Malaysia and no, we are not talking about the number of times Mark Webber may or may not have cursed Sebastian Vettel. McLaren changed Jenson Button's four wheels in 2.31s (old world record) at the German Grand Prix last year, but the Milton Keynes squad bettered that mark by quite some distance. 'In fact, having reviewed the data, we're pretty sure we beat the previous mark on five separate occasions during the race,' the team said on its website. Sebastian Vettel Stop 1 (Lap 5): 2.13 seconds Mark Webber Stop 1 (Lap 7): 2.13 seconds Mark Webber Stop 2 (Lap 19): 2.05 seconds Mark Webber Stop 3 (Lap 31): 2.21 seconds Mark Webber Stop 4 (Lap 43): 2.26 seconds Pretty soon they'll be changing the tyres on the fly. |
Would be interesting to know how they timed that, if its the time between the car stopped to car going that is a very impressive time.
Only a few ways to reduce a pit stop time, you can shorten each movement, speed up each movement, overlap movements simultaneously and reduce the number of movements. Car positioning is probably the most critical effect on time as if the mechanics all have to shuffle along from their set position, then they will be slow. There is so little margin for error the team that does it with the minimum number of mistakes is usually the fastest. Changing on the wheels automatically on the fly was considered by some teams when they went from fuel to no fuel stops, the FIA stamped on that pretty quickly. |
They were calling it the stationary time.
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time to reduce the pit guys to 4 tire changers and 2 jack men and a paddle flipper guy
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That is stupidly fast. A mate of mine is the Tyre Technician for Vettel and does his rear left tyre during the race. Looks like he's going to have to get some more practice in.
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^It's the same crew for both drivers.
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Brilliant. Usually takes me half an hour to change between winter and summer wheels..
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Don't blink
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Team work and dedication at it's finest.
I'm surprised no one has chimed in to proclaim "it's Newey! No real talent in the pits, just the Newey design" lol |
Seems no one uses the air jack anymore. Too slow.
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I swapped off my snows last weekend, took me all afternoon.
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If he does the wheels/tyres I'm sure it will be his job to make sure the right tyres are up to temperature and given out for the correct corner of each car when the race engineer requests a pit stop. I'm guessing his job in the pit stop would be fitting or removing the wheel on the rear corner on the garage side ;) Doing a pitstop is a suprisingly calm experience when you are in the middle of it, your mentally sampling rate shoots up to cope with increased speed of what you are doing. I wouldn't want to do it for a living though as there is huge pressure not to make a mistake. |
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Frankly, I think too much emphasis is placed on pitting. I think all series ought to have a minimum time for a stop. Let's say it was 20 seconds for stock cars. That would cost a lot less in training super athletes to perform the stop. It would also allow more time for adjustments and repairs. At this point a crew chief has a choice sometimes of, "Do we put water in it or go for broke to try and win before it blows up?" I think it's safer for those in the pits and those on the track to not have to make that decision. I don't decry the F1 rule to not let teams fuel the cars if stops are going to be so rushed. It might be better if NASCAR didn't spill a quart every time they pit. Take some time! |
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Front jack man is usually faster lifting as the car basically runs into him, rear jackman is usually faster lowering as he doesn't have to get out of the way. Main downside with powered front jack is extra weight which slows the time down required to swing it clear of the car. The speed/distance moved for lifting and removing when using a powered front jack are very different, it was a tricky balance to get right for saving time. F1 pit stop development is as fast paced as car development as it can make the difference of a gaining or losing a place on track. Take the front jack as an example most are an evolution of one teams design, lets say Team A designs the quickest, Team B copies and improves, then Team C takes it further and eventually Team A has to do a redesign to regain the advantage they had. If Team A is successful the cycle is repeated. Last fueled pit stops were around low 4 secs, then dropped down to mid-high 2 secs with no fuel. Finding ways to reduce time now is very difficult as reaction times make up a lot of the time of a pit stop. Not sure where teams need to go to get below 2 secs but I'll bet my house it will happen. Won't make the racing any better but must be good fun trying to get there. |
Anyone notice the pit work in an Indy Car race? Most teams don't have the remote cranking motor in position when/if the driver stalls the engine upon leaving the pit space. Is it against the rules to have it ready or do they have to wait for the engine to stop?
Sherwood |
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