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From: Julian Bond on 20 Jul 2010 16:48 http://www.motorcyclenews.com/MCN/sport/sportresults/MotoGP/2010/July/jul 201-suzuki-gets-increased-engine-allocation/ Hmmm. So Suzuki are on double secret probation? Jeez' what is it going to take? I really don't wish this on the riders, but I'm holding my breath each race in case Rossi's engine blows up and then Lorenzo, Pedrosa and Stoner fall off on the oil. We came awful close to that in practice with Lorenzo's engine. Is it going to take some really high profile accident to bring everyone to their senses? Anyone want to take bets on when the first big blow up happens in a race to one of the aliens? -- Julian Bond E&MSN: julian_bond at voidstar.com M: +44 (0)77 5907 2173 Webmaster: http://www.ecademy.com/ T: +44 (0)192 0412 433 Personal WebLog: http://www.voidstar.com/ skype:julian.bond?chat Keep Away From Children
From: Champ on 20 Jul 2010 17:28 On Tue, 20 Jul 2010 21:48:49 +0100, Julian Bond <julian_bond(a)voidstar.com> wrote: >I really don't wish this on the riders, but I'm holding my breath each >race in case Rossi's engine blows up and then Lorenzo, Pedrosa and >Stoner fall off on the oil. We came awful close to that in practice with >Lorenzo's engine. Is it going to take some really high profile accident >to bring everyone to their senses? Anyone want to take bets on when the >first big blow up happens in a race to one of the aliens? I got an email from Neil Spalding this evening! I'd emailed him a few days ago, suggesting that as the bikes were so very sensitive to loss of tyre temperature nowadays [1], why didn't the teams fit remote temperature sensors to the bikes, linked to a warning on the dash. Neil responded that they used to, but they were banned now! So, in the name of reducing costs, we've got riders crashing on cooled tyres. [1] Stoner's warmup lap crash last year, and Rossi's accident this year being just the 2 most high profile examples -- Champ neal at champ dot org dot uk
From: Julian Bond on 21 Jul 2010 02:36 Mark N <menusbaumNYETSPAM(a)earthlink.net> Tue, 20 Jul 2010 21:39:21 >The one thing that might stop this is that they will race their >freshest motors, while they practice on the high-mileage ones. So >unless at the end of the year they have no choice, it's not terribly >likely. I also think practice is the more dangerous situation, because >the riders are very spread out, they're less likely to see a blow-up >but there might not be time enough to give them warning, as was the >case last weekend. I assume you've seen this. http://motomatters.com/news/2010/07/17/how_lorenzo_s_engine_blow_up_could _affec.html IMHO Lorenzo is not going to get to the end of the year on his allocation. My guess is that tech3 won't either even if they turn the rev limits down and make them even more of a dog than they are now. Hard to tell about Rossi as his engines have done one less meeting and had 2 being ridden slowly. >Personally, I think the problem here is a too-aggressive move to motor >limitations, coupled with the increasing disaster that is 800cc MotoGP. >If they were running 1000s I have to imagine that building a reliable >long-mileage motor that made sufficient power wouldn't be so difficult. If the 1000cc rule had stayed but they'd added the limited engines rule we'd be in the same situation. When it ended we were in just the same horsepower, revs and fuel limitation battle we're in now. It's racing. -- Julian Bond E&MSN: julian_bond at voidstar.com M: +44 (0)77 5907 2173 Webmaster: http://www.ecademy.com/ T: +44 (0)192 0412 433 Personal WebLog: http://www.voidstar.com/ skype:julian.bond?chat Keep Away From Children
From: Julian Bond on 21 Jul 2010 10:08 Switters <me(a)privacy.net> Wed, 21 Jul 2010 12:35:41 >On Tue, 20 Jul 2010 20:48:49 GMT, Julian Bond wrote: > >> Hmmm. So Suzuki are on double secret probation? > >I don't believe a single thing in that rag unless I've read it somewhere >else. Here you go then. http://motomatters.com/news/2010/07/20/some_are_more_equal_than_others_su zuki_t.html Krops is repeating the rumour, but as he's an insider in the paddock now, I'd give it a bit more weight. -- Julian Bond E&MSN: julian_bond at voidstar.com M: +44 (0)77 5907 2173 Webmaster: http://www.ecademy.com/ T: +44 (0)192 0412 433 Personal WebLog: http://www.voidstar.com/ skype:julian.bond?chat Alcohol-Free
From: Mark N on 21 Jul 2010 14:50
Julian Bond wrote: > Mark N > Hard > to tell about Rossi as his engines have done one less meeting and had 2 > being ridden slowly. Rossi missed four races, and the fossil fill-in only did one weekend, and probably entirely on his most-tired motors. So Rossi probably has a notable edge over Lorenzo in this regard. If Lorenzo has to add two more motors than Rossi, that could easily be 40 points or so. And if Lorenzo ratchets back performance to stretch use, it actually could end up more. And one assumews the later motors will be better, and Rossi should have more of those. In some sense over the last four races Lorenzo has been doing Rossi's testing. > >Personally, I think the problem here is a too-aggressive move to motor > >limitations, coupled with the increasing disaster that is 800cc MotoGP. > >If they were running 1000s I have to imagine that building a reliable > >long-mileage motor that made sufficient power wouldn't be so difficult. > > If the 1000cc rule had stayed but they'd added the limited engines rule > we'd be in the same situation. When it ended we were in just the same > horsepower, revs and fuel limitation battle we're in now. It's racing. I kind off doubt that. 1000s make excessive power for the tires, so much of the electronic and rider management would be focused on limiting the power going to the tire. 800s don't so much, so the motors have focused more on peak power and high revs to get there, and management has been more focused on smoothing the powerband. It would be useful to know exactly where the failures have come from and the areas that are the weakest links in achieving mileage requirements on the 800s, but in simple terms it probably comes down to rev levels. My guess is parts are stressed less at lower revs, even if the motor is bigger; issues would be less likely to come from the head, for instance, rev levels were the whole reason for the rather problematic move to pneumatics for the Japanese. |