Jolle wrote: ↑02 Feb 2022, 16:08
It's a big difference working with a gas vs working with a liquid. Liquid spil burns, gas leak explodes.
besides the car, there must be some kind of system to fuel the cars, in or around the padock/pit boxes. Some kind of traveling system of 10000 liters, accessible by the team, usable for ten garages and traveling around the world to 23 races.
lets say, there is a mobile "pump" system so every pit crew can fuel their own car. One leak in this system, one fault, damaged hose by a forklift truck or whatever and due to the relative low ignition point of propane and butane gas, you have a gas explosion that will level the whole pit complex.
besides, propane or butane tanks are not allowed on airplanes, some tunnels, boats, etc so... there is that problem.
oh, plus, when a crash like Grosjean would happen again, even when the tank doesn't rupture, there would be only one safe thing to do: evacuate that area and wait until the fire is over and everything is cooled down. A explosion of 200-300 liter propane or butane tank, especially one made to withstand extreme amounts of pressure, would potentially kill so many people, that LeMans 55 looks like a small incident.
You're drifting into hollywood territory, where even an oxygen tank is an explosive device. LPG has been handled with relative safety for a century.
And a tank would be build or allowed to rise to "extreme amounts" pressure. It would have relief valves.
The goal is to make things safe and to create a Michael bay movie.
"besides, propane or butane tanks are not allowed on airplanes, some tunnels, boats, etc so... there is that problem. "
And you can just carry around petrol cannisters, right?