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16 May 2010, 11:15
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#1
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Rookie
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 73
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Yellow or green flag?
Yesterday's Monaco qualifications and Kovalainen's spin (first one) remembered me of one of the questions about fagging I always have. Kovalainen spun just in front of the flag post (flag marshal) and then the yellow was throw out. I don't want to judge the particular marshal, but just ask the general question: should it be yellow or green? The car was before the flag post, so according to the rules it should be green, but... the coming drivers would see the flag way before they reach the spot. What would you do in this situation? I, personally, would do same as the marshal did. But would like to hear form more experienced flaggies.
A link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWX2-N9xWu8 (bad quality, but the only I found)
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16 May 2010, 11:29
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#2
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Veteran
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We had a similar situation during the FIA GT3 race a couple of weeks ago at Silverstone when a Corvette beached itself in the mud, opposite the Luffield in flagpost. The flaggy waved a yellow but I was wondering whether a green should have been shown. The problem there is that the flag point is so far from the track, the flaggy could well have seen the incident as after him, but from my position (Luffield centre) it looked slightly before the post. A speccy has mentioned elsewhere on this site that it looked way before the flag point from his position. I'm sure if he was watching from the other side of the complex it would have appeared to be well after the post. The point I'm trying to make (quite badly!!) is that the flaggy can make the decision based only from his position so unless you are also at that position, it's difficult to judge otherwise.
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16 May 2010, 11:35
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#3
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CCNA  Royalridge Computing  A LARGE Teapot
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We had that discussion at the time, while we were watching. It's a judgement call. I'm not 100% clear on what flag rules they were using yesterday as I saw a steady yellow out at one point, so I don't know if they were going full FIA or if the qually was being done under local rules.
I guess the text book answer is that they should show a green. However, given how short the flag sectors are on that circuit, they may have had a "repeater flag" arrangement set up with the previous flag post. Equally, there may have been a visibility issue between the two flag posts and the only way to notify them of the incident was to put out a yellow.
Given how close to the incident the flag post was, I don't see any issue with going yellow, provided the yellow will force one at the previous post i.e. double waved for FIA rules and single waved for normal rules.
Just my own opinion.
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16 May 2010, 15:09
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#4
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 Race Official
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By the book, it's straightforward, it's a green if the incident is before the post, otherwise it's yellow.
I always temper that with "never say never and always be wary of always".
Taking the issue with visibility and not being sure if it's before or after the post - what I'd do depends what visibility the preceeding post has. If they can see the incident and I'm not sure what flag I should be waving, I'll go green (so that the preceeding post will obviously go yellow). That way there is a larger area protected before the incident and a minimal after. If they can't see the incident because of a blind spot, or they're single manned and the flaggie looks like he's looking the opposite way, I'll go yellow - so that the incident is covered.
Similarly, there are exceptional situations (I've done it once) where you can justify putting out what technically may be the "wrong" flag - when you take into account visibility, sight lines, nature of the incident, and everything else. You have to take a judgment call at the time, and stick with it.
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- Minnie Louise Haskins
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16 May 2010, 17:49
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#5
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Veteran
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Posts: 1,751
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My rule of thumb is that most "foreign" circuits seem to run their own flag rules regardless of any blue or yellow books.
Hence their need to jump out on track waving a yellow just ahead of rear of stricken car etc.. Amazing powers that the flags have in terms of protection...
I've done it myself at Le Mans - standing out there waving an oil flag while the slick is being dressed. It's madness, but it is what is expected.
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16 May 2010, 19:20
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#6
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when you watch some of the classic F1 on the BBC's red button of Monaco - they seem to have a history of a unique way of yellow flagging. Seems they always try to get near the car and wave a yellow, in the 70s and 80s they would stand infront of the car or to one side facing the oncoming traffic and wave the flag, later standing behind the armco in line with the car - then either side of the incident normal flag rules seem to apply.
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16 May 2010, 22:40
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#7
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Rookie
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 73
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Thanks for answers. Yes, it very much depends on the situation on th etrack, position of other flag points, and all this things you cannot see/know while armchair marshalling
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lord Summerisle
when you watch some of the classic F1 on the BBC's red button of Monaco - they seem to have a history of a unique way of yellow flagging. Seems they always try to get near the car and wave a yellow, in the 70s and 80s they would stand infront of the car or to one side facing the oncoming traffic and wave the flag, later standing behind the armco in line with the car - then either side of the incident normal flag rules seem to apply.
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And I think today I also saw some marshals running down the track, behind the armco thought, with yellow flags, to be in front of incident.
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17 May 2010, 12:05
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#8
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La Grande Théière
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5 minutes from the kentagon |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lord Summerisle
when you watch some of the classic F1 on the BBC's red button of Monaco - they seem to have a history of a unique way of yellow flagging. Seems they always try to get near the car and wave a yellow, in the 70s and 80s they would stand infront of the car or to one side facing the oncoming traffic and wave the flag, later standing behind the armco in line with the car - then either side of the incident normal flag rules seem to apply.
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thought I saw them do this yesterday, yellow flag out on track, up track of incident - ? at the Trulli accident. Anyway, it's still fairly standard practice (on French posts) at Le Mans.
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Alasdair
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16 May 2010, 22:58
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#9
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you did which is one of several reasons why i commented in a different thread that i'd seen a lot of very good flagging over this weekend. very much like protecting a car that is being pushed in pitlane, all be it a mush faster pitlane
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17 May 2010, 08:12
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#10
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I don't usually flag, just done a few days in 2 years, so was wondering what our more experienced flaggies would do if a car came to rest right in line with their flag post? Would it be a case of looking to the previous post & see what they're showing, ie waved yellow would mean you show a green or would you just instinctively throw a waved yellow?
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I used to be with it, until they changed what it is. Now what I'm with is no longer it.
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17 May 2010, 08:36
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#11
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Personally I would move in front of it and wave a yellow. Do not want to be standing behind a car holding green flag, in case it gets hit!
If it's across the track from me, I would probably still do the same.
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17 May 2010, 10:03
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#12
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Rookie
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 73
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Quote:
Originally Posted by White flag man
Personally I would move in front of it and wave a yellow. Do not want to be standing behind a car holding green flag, in case it gets hit!
If it's across the track from me, I would probably still do the same.
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I've never thought about moving in front before, but I think it is a very clever idea! But on the other hand, I was only flagging few times and it was always Silverstone, where it is sometimes difficult to move.
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17 May 2010, 11:53
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#13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mjpiotr
I've never thought about moving in front before, but I think it is a very clever idea! But on the other hand, I was only flagging few times and it was always Silverstone, where it is sometimes difficult to move.
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Quite true,
don't advise you to move if you're on the tower at Luffield, there's a big drop!
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Recently I went on a ballooning holiday...............I put on four stone!
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18 May 2010, 14:34
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#14
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Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 845
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Quote:
Originally Posted by White flag man
Personally I would move in front of it and wave a yellow. Do not want to be standing behind a car holding green flag, in case it gets hit!
If it's across the track from me, I would probably still do the same.
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Pleased to read that - I recall about a year ago, you (I think) were Copse In & I was Copse Out and had a visitor park just short of my toes. By stepping forward with a waved & you dropping to stationary we protected the incident until the driver was out, but without neutralising half the straight. Once the driver was clear, I dropped to stationary for a lap and then down to hazard board (couldn't see if you had yours out or not!). I half expected some "feedback" from somebody later on, but we seemed to get it right and get them racing asap without compromising safety or locking out a huge chunk of the circuit. Not sure how far I'd have pushed the boundaries for an FIA event though - always got the feeling that they lean toward pedant rather than "a bit of common"?
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17 May 2010, 12:19
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#15
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 Race Official
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When flagging, you want to protect the approach to the incident, not the area after it. FIA flag rules give you little option with just a waved yellow and no prior stationary, so if you're next to the incident on the exit of a blind bend (say Copse) and you're waving a yellow then the first the approaching traffic is going to know about it is as they exit the blind part of the bend. If you've just got a car parked by the wall with the driver getting out unaided, that's probably OK, but if you have a problem nearer to the track or marshals are in attendance then it's not good enough.
There are now two options.
1) The previous post could also wave a yellow. Not strictly in accordance with the letter of the FIA rules, but can be justified in spirit - if you believe cars need to slow through your section even for an incident that's not quite in it, then nothing says you can't wave a flag as well. This probably gives the best warning as long as it's only done sparingly, we don't want the yellow over-used.
2) If the incident is very close and you can either move a couple of steps at most or justify that it's effectively clear once they've passed you, you can show the green and force the yellow upstream to the previous post, thus producing a similar result but without such a long stretch covered or the risk of too much yellow. (can't move if the flag point is fixed of course, and it's a decision you shouldn't take lightly - you've told them where the flag point is on the green flag lap and that's where it must remain give or take a yard or two) Remember that if the incident is alongside you and you're showing yellow, you've effectively shut down racing for a couple of hundred yards of clear track after they've passed you.
Under British rules with the preceding yellow then you're also making a decision as to whether it requires waved or stationary so what you do may be subtly different. In all cases, you're still applying the same question. 'What am I communicating to the drivers?' If they're good to go once they've reached your flag then it's green, and if not it's yellow.
IMO with regard to the original incident, I would have expected green from the marshal by the car and yellow on the post prior. However, that assumes the previous post wasn't showing yellow as well - there may well be a local agreement to do so. What little I've seen of the coverage suggested that the flaggies were pretty sure of what they were doing under the rules. The question is whether the rulemakers knew what they were doing, of which I'm less confident.
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