Driving to a delta on the virtual safety car seems to work on the testing.
Calling it a Virtual Safety Car is a bit missleasing. It doesn't follow the format of a SC (bunch the field up, let cars pass, and standing starts next year). It's more an enforced double waved yellow. Maintains everyone's gaps while controlling their speed through dangerous areas.
The instant deployment and instant withdrawal is a good thing. SCs waste loads of laps faffing about. With this your controlling the race for only the amount of time you need for the danger to he cleared.
It does avoid the pushing into a slow down area concern. Everyone does the same speed from the same time and that's that.
Well we have 18 cars with Sauber expected to leave and Force India seemingly doubtful and Lotus have been are far from secure for a year now. You need the team's agreement to get them to up their quota by 50% and not all teams will be able to fulfil it anyway. Teams like Williams can't just crank out another car and associated set of engineers and mechanics.
It's a delicate issue because there is no obvious fix to a very real problem. Add a third car and you've got podium lockouts, massive points differences or cars which float around without any real purpose (and potentially cause problems for teams which are racing for points) or cars which aren't on parity with the others (a year old) and thus a tiered championship. None of the fixes suits everyone, so you're relying on teams all agreeing to something which might be detrimental to their interests or you've got a small grid. In the end, we all lose out.
And you can't change the engine spec this late. Exhaust or something might be possible, but the very nature of the regs is what stops the volume of the noise. And any change would drive up costs further.
F1 has found itself in a horrible position entirely of its own making and with no obvious fix.
The speed is so slow they wouldn't be locking up or able to make time up.
Not if Bernie is creaming it. How do we know what he does? He can buy off courts after all.
Of what we saw on the feed Hamilton still had to correct the car in FP1 going through the esses while they were sticking to the delta, so I'd argue enough still hasn't been done. I don't know if that's a fundamental aspect of the car at lower speed, or it was him trying to examine the grip levels while taking a chunk of kerb, but it shows the potential is still there to lose a car while going a little slower.
Well CVCs accounts are public, so go have a look if you want.
The ACO made cars go at 50mph I think it was through a yellow zone. Just do that. Extend the zone to the zone beforehand to give them time to react if you need to. Just don't leave it to them to decide where in the lap to back off. Take it out of their hands.
How do you know thats not fiddled?
Yeah because you have so much faith.
I think your miss understanding how the VSC works.