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F1 teams to debate wet weather standing starts

F1 teams will this week debate the idea of having standing starts in wet conditions in order to avoid the sort of situation seen at the British GP, where fans were denied the opportunity to see a proper start.

The grid before the start of the race

Photo by: XPB Images

A Water logged grid
lh Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 W07 Hybrid leads behind the FIA Safety Car
Jenson Button, McLaren MP4-31
Fernando Alonso, McLaren MP4-31
Circuit atmosphere
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB12 at the grid
Pascal Wehrlein, Manor Racing MRT05
Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 W07 Hybrid leads Nico Rosberg, Mercedes AMG F1 W07 Hybri

The plan is that in wet conditions after several laps of safety car running instead of the field simply being released, as was the case at Silverstone, everyone will stop on the grid and conduct a normal start.

Those safety car laps will then effectively be formation laps on extreme wet tyres.

A similar idea to to be applied to all safety car restarts has previously been adopted, but it was dropped without being used because after further debate it was felt that it was too complicated to have multiple starts in one event.

However, the FIA believes that the wet race scenario could work.

The likelihood is that new rule would ensure that drivers cannot change tyres before the standing start, meaning they would all have to go to the grid and not dash into the pits for a change to intermediates when the safety car period ends.

The idea will be debated by team managers at the Sporting Regulations Meeting on Wednesday, and will then go to the Strategy Group meeting the following day.

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff, who is a member of the Strategy Group, is fully behind the plan.

"As far as Silverstone is concerned we should have let them off the leash a lap or two earlier," said Wolff.

"In my opinion if I could define the rules, and I can't clearly, let them follow the safety car for a lap or two to see what's happening out there, and then the safety car comes in and they do a standing start, which is clearly one of the most exciting things. Or if we stick with the current rules, just pit.

"I think due to the circumstances around Jules [Bianchi's] accident and the aftermath there is an 'uber caution' which is being deployed at the moment.

"You can somehow understand that, but we I think we have to come back to what motor racing is all about, which is having the best drivers out there in the most powerful machines in tricky conditions. They can manage that."

"It could be quite good," added Lewis Hamilton. "In Silverstone 2008 we started in the wet, and it was heavy. I think we were on intermediates, but it was still pretty wet. A wet start is exciting, just as exciting as a dry start, if not more. I'm all for that."

However, Jenson Button cautioned that sometimes conditions can be too difficult for a standing start.

"Silverstone was right to start behind the safety car because we all would have ended up in the gravel trap, half of us probably upside down, so it was right at Silverstone," he said.

"I think the issue at Silverstone was the safety car was out way too long, but the drainage was very bad at Turn 1 – it was like a lake. You arrived there and you didn't know what you were going to get.

"I think in certain situations you can have a standing start in the wet, we've had many before but it seems at the moment, to start the race when it's wet, if it is an absolute downpour then that is too wet.

"It is not just visibility, it is the tyre cannot take that amount of water on the circuit. It is not a skill level because you are totally out of control at that point."

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