should the roll hoop be made from the same material as the Halo ?
And mandated shape then, ie. spec part like the halo, and side-impact structures (though those are from carbon indeed)? Well, probably the FIA might consider it.jagunx51 wrote: ↑04 Jul 2022, 13:59should the roll hoop be made from the same material as the Halo ?
https://res.cloudinary.com/engineering- ... pbrvyq.jpg
Surely they're gonna have a close look at why - and how - the structure failed. If the blade design is at fault they'll certainly at least mandate that it's an actual hoop structure.
The logical conclusion would join up both constructions with an integrated 'overhead' loop to the existing structure, angled back into the position of the current hoop. A survival cell sort of cage.jagunx51 wrote: ↑04 Jul 2022, 13:59should the roll hoop be made from the same material as the Halo ?
https://res.cloudinary.com/engineering- ... pbrvyq.jpg
Right, so it's the FIA specs that are wrong. If they add weight, they add weight, but it is unacceptable. The FIA, I believe doesn't spec blow over testing either, which is a huge issue when a ground effects car goes backwards at speed. Not the case here, but these crashes result in cars coming down out of the air on their roll hoops at times, and if the roll hoop failed here, no doubt it would fail in that situation as well.continuum16 wrote: ↑05 Jul 2022, 16:28While it is 100% concerning that the roll hoop failed, the team passed the FIA crash tests, so I would imagine that the crash test requirements will be increased before any kind of shape is mandated. This will probably add more weight, and at the highest point on the car this is less than ideal in terms of vehicle dynamics. However, I doubt anyone would reject strengthening the roll hoop requirements based on what we've seen.
I know that Vasseur has already stated that the team would want to carry over things like the tub/survival cell to 2023, so if the requirements for the survival cell change, this could unfortunately have a major budget cap impact as well.
edit: I don't think the shape helps, it's common knowledge that triangular shapes disperse impacts better than any other, and most teams employ a triangular or trapezoidal structure in this area. I think we have seen the last blade-style hoop, whether the FIA mandates the shape or not.
Yes, I would imagine that the hoop would probably fail in that situation as well. It's a situation like most safety measures; it seems adequate until some crazy incident occurs, and then it becomes apparent that it's not...Hoffman900 wrote: ↑05 Jul 2022, 16:34Right, so it's the FIA specs that are wrong. If they add weight, they add weight, but it is unacceptable. The FIA, I believe doesn't spec blow over testing either, which is a huge issue when a ground effects car goes backwards at speed. Not the case here, but these crashes result in cars coming down out of the air on their roll hoops at times, and if the roll hoop failed here, no doubt it would fail in that situation as well.
Looks like the roll over blade is a solid lump bonded to a solid lump bonded to the top of the tub. You can see what appears to be the remains of a bonding agent on the stump here. Seems like a poor piece of design that meets a test but has little extra capacity beyond that.
Probably it's only tested to compression, and under a shear load it simply got teared away. If you do a real hoop, it will never happen, because for a shear load at the tip, you will always end with a compression in one side and traction in the other. Also some shear component in both sides, but much smaller.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑05 Jul 2022, 23:14Looks like the roll over blade is a solid lump bonded to a solid lump bonded to the top of the tub. You can see what appears to be the remains of a bonding agent on the stump here. Seems like a poor piece of design that meets a test but has little extra capacity beyond that.
https://i.ibb.co/hCtqMFT/image-2022-07-05-221111358.png
It will have passed the tests - but if it's been subjected to a load greater than the tests then failure is always a possible outcome.BassVirolla wrote: ↑06 Jul 2022, 03:56Probably it's only tested to compression, and under a shear load it simply got teared away. If you do a real hoop, it will never happen, because for a shear load at the tip, you will always end with a compression in one side and traction in the other. Also some shear component in both sides, but much smaller.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑05 Jul 2022, 23:14Looks like the roll over blade is a solid lump bonded to a solid lump bonded to the top of the tub. You can see what appears to be the remains of a bonding agent on the stump here. Seems like a poor piece of design that meets a test but has little extra capacity beyond that.
https://i.ibb.co/hCtqMFT/image-2022-07-05-221111358.png
Well, when I said "will never happen" I should say "will be more difficult to happen".Just_a_fan wrote: ↑06 Jul 2022, 10:07It will have passed the tests - but if it's been subjected to a load greater than the tests then failure is always a possible outcome.BassVirolla wrote: ↑06 Jul 2022, 03:56Probably it's only tested to compression, and under a shear load it simply got teared away. If you do a real hoop, it will never happen, because for a shear load at the tip, you will always end with a compression in one side and traction in the other. Also some shear component in both sides, but much smaller.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑05 Jul 2022, 23:14
Looks like the roll over blade is a solid lump bonded to a solid lump bonded to the top of the tub. You can see what appears to be the remains of a bonding agent on the stump here. Seems like a poor piece of design that meets a test but has little extra capacity beyond that.
https://i.ibb.co/hCtqMFT/image-2022-07-05-221111358.png
Even a hoop will fail given sufficient load in a certain direction. And then there are the fixings and the item the fixings are attached to. Look at Grosjean's crash - that tore the car apart and ripped the tub (to expose the fuel tank) and that's the strongest item in the car after the engine block and the halo device.
It has to be tested in 3 directions. Laterally, longitudinally and vertically.BassVirolla wrote: ↑06 Jul 2022, 03:56Probably it's only tested to compression, and under a shear load it simply got teared away. If you do a real hoop, it will never happen, because for a shear load at the tip, you will always end with a compression in one side and traction in the other. Also some shear component in both sides, but much smaller.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑05 Jul 2022, 23:14Looks like the roll over blade is a solid lump bonded to a solid lump bonded to the top of the tub. You can see what appears to be the remains of a bonding agent on the stump here. Seems like a poor piece of design that meets a test but has little extra capacity beyond that.
https://i.ibb.co/hCtqMFT/image-2022-07-05-221111358.png