Open wheelers made sense when the cars where low speed, so drag was not important but low weight and inertia moment yes. I bet that with a fixed engine power, lets say 700HP and no other rules, the fastest car would not be an open wheeler. So no, they dont make sense still, but I love them, you love them, we all love them and even Henry Surtees loved them. We all know the risks, some accept them and some doesnt. Thankfully others work hard to try to minimize them.dumrick wrote:Why doesn't anyone really thinks about how unsafe the layout of racing cars with exposed wheels and open cockpits is? A strong canopy with an ejection mechanism would reduce the risk greatly. Furthermore, racing with wheels exposed isn't fuel effective, brings added risks and isn't road relevant.
Tradition dictates that the origin of formula cars goes back to the pre-WWII days, but does it really makes sense still?
Thanks for adressing the issue here. So we have a bunch of tree huggers preventing appropriate modern track safety? It is the curse of democracy that it is easier to prevent something being done than get something done.CMSMJ1 wrote:I see where you are coming from WhiteBlue but the fact of the matter is that a wheel struck the driver on the head.
The Brands track cannot have larger run off due to the protection of the local forests/trees. The circuit won the right to host F1 again in the late 90's but was not able to develop the track and so it went to Silverstone.
What would be the point? If you want a better looking Mona Lisa just think of buying a poster of Kiera Knightly or something, and leave the painting alone. Brands Hatch is safe enough and if Bernie desn't want to bring F1 there, then so be it.WhiteBlue wrote:If they want to keep racing at Brands Hatch they should bring the track up to scratch and plant replacement trees else where in that ground.
He didn't and if someone did there would be no complaint. The pit wall at Bahrain is state of the art and an accident there cannot be blamed on the lack of track safety. So why don't we keep the discussion on topic, which is Henry Surtees's accident at Brands Hatch.modbaraban wrote:Clarke could have spun off into the pitwall in Bahrain and lose a wheel. Would you still blame the trees?
Well, I don't know what you guys love, but I love automotive racing, be it F1, classic cars, WTCC or ALMS. I don't love single seaters JUST BECAUSE they have open cockpits.Belatti wrote:So no, they dont make sense still, but I love them, you love them, we all love them and even Henry Surtees loved them. We all know the risks, some accept them and some doesnt. Thankfully others work hard to try to minimize them.
I think you have the wrong view of safety here. Improving safety means you eliminate obvious risks which take reasonable resources to fix. Then there will always be residual risks that cannot be avoided. People will have to live with those and are willing to.dumrick wrote: Here at F1Tech, the discussion is getting more and more surrealistic as if any track in the world could avoid flying cars, wheels or objects from impacting the driver's head and killing him.
That's not an argument. The fact is that you can spin out of the last corner and hit the pitwall in any track so your mosley-praising-brands-hatch-blaming tirade is just that.WhiteBlue wrote:He didn't and if someone did there would be no complaint. The pit wall at Bahrain is state of the art and an accident there cannot be blamed on the lack of track safety. So why don't we keep the discussion on topic, which is Henry Surtees's accident at Brands Hatch.modbaraban wrote:Clarke could have spun off into the pitwall in Bahrain and lose a wheel. Would you still blame the trees?
Sure?WhiteBlue wrote:What has Mr. Mosley to do with that? The cars are as safe as F1 cars.
Where have I said anything about banning open wheel racing? I said I find the concept irrelevant, but its danger can be tackled (the IRL is looking for a bumper system behind the rear wheels, to avoid wheel contact, just to give you an example).WhiteBlue wrote:The other thing is to ban open wheel racing.
Read the source with the Palmer interview I posted. The F2 design is exactly the same as F1. So it is carbon and same tethering spec.timbo wrote:Sure?WhiteBlue wrote:What has Mr. Mosley to do with that? The cars are as safe as F1 cars.
Why they lose wheels so easily?
What material are suspension arms?
Many folks argued that metal arms are cheaper but I firmly believe that carbon arms absorb energy much better and even if wheel is lost it won't carry as much energy.
There's something that looks wrong on the footage of crash. F1 cars lose wheels when they are more or less disintegrate. On both crashes from the Surtees accident footage they only lost their rear wings while bodywork are almost intact.WhiteBlue wrote:Read the source with the Palmer interview I posted. The F2 design is exactly the same as F1. So it is carbon and same tethering spec.
F1 cars also loose wheels if the impact energy is high enough.
If it's a fact, go ahead prove it. Like I said, remove 1m of run off in that track and we wouldn't be typing any of this. A 1m 'less safe' in your view track would have "prevented" the accident. Hope you can understand that as it's simple geometry.WhiteBlue wrote:You do not listen! It is a fact that better track safety could have prevented the debris of Clarke's accident from getting back on track.alelanza wrote:..You don't know at what speed that tyre came back into the track, you don't know how it came loose, you don't know how much energy the barrier absorbed.
In a freak accident like that one, slowing the car down, having bigger run offs, barriers that absorb more energy, might have meant the tyre would have simply hit someone else that was behind Mr. Surtees. In fact, all other things constant, imagine that run off would have been 1m shorter, then the tyre would have just missed him. Or maybe not, you just don't know...
Again, this could happen and has happened in any of the F1 tracks, the main difference is no one was in the wrong spot at the wrong time, thus the term freak accident.WhiteBlue wrote:That is what run offs and gravel beds are designed to do. But when they are not present where needed they cannot do the job. There is no secret to good safety design. Compare Istanbul and Brands Hatch
You may want to re-think that, speeds and trajectories here are nearly infinite. While you more or less can predict where a car will run off to, and add corresponding run offs and the like, it's very difficult to predict the trajectory and speed of a bouncing tyre. Recently I dropped a cup of coffee from a 1.2m counter top, after hitting the floor almost half of the now broken cup bounced all the way back up to where it was before i pushed it. I doubt anyone could have predicted that... I for one was surprised to see half of my mess come back to its original location (had it been made of rubber I would have been less surprised, but it was ceramic)WhiteBlue wrote:The speeds and trajectories are known
What does 'statement of fact' mean to you? I asked you a few questions, that were essential for you to be able to tell what was needed to avoid this accident, yet you answered none. If you can't answer them, then you simply don't know, that's my point and it's up to you to disprove itWhiteBlue wrote: What is your point? Other accidents have other circumstances. What do they have to do with my statement of fact of this particular tragedy. This accident could have been avoided. You cannot deny it.
Seeing as how you are simply repeating yourself, i was hoping that by upping the tone here you would snap out of that cycle. Unfortunately that didn't work... so i'll try being nice. Then next time i'll be rude againWhiteBlue wrote:What a rude and condescending way of discussing a serious issue. The young Surtees died and all I'm doing here is discussing ways of preventing such tragic loss of life.
Haven't seen the autopsy, or pics of the helmet, so who knows. What i'm going by is, i've seen guys in motocross land on their heads and snap their neck broken. Most end up paralytic, but the only two i've seen dead died from a swollen brain, caused by the main impact itself. Which makes me think you're probably right, no matter how good your helmet is, if your head accelerates quick enough in any direction the brain inside will still get smashed against your own skull, so even if the helmet and bone are intact your brain will still sustain heavy damage. Meaning the only way to avoid this would be for the helmet to be almost afixed to the chassis, which in the end i guess may be even more dangerous, statistically speakingDiesel wrote: I don't think any changes to the helmet would have made much difference. His helmet was undamaged from what I could see, I think it was the impact on his neck that did the damage...
It's not like a closed cockpit can guarantee you'll never die, right?dumrick wrote: Why doesn't anyone really thinks about how unsafe the layout of racing cars with exposed wheels and open cockpits is?
Sure, we must be aware that risk is a part of this sport but, in the same way safety belts and crash structures were introduced to control it, if there is a record of accidents that prove that the current roll bar regulations and the virtual line between them being over a driver's head are only enough in a flat world, something should be made to improve it.alelanza wrote:It's not like a closed cockpit can guarantee you'll never die, right?
Exactly two of the cases that come to my mind, where terrible injuries were avoided by luck, not by design.alelanza wrote:Then again we saw one of the Toro Rosso drivers (I think TR, Barcelona was it?) see a rear wheel (yes car attached to it) pass inches away from his head this year. And didn't Vettel almost lose a finger at Spa because of a similar situation prior to being in F1? Pieces of debris fly in unpredictable directions, that's fact.
I've not heard one way or another, but my instinct tells me that this wasn't a head injury, but a spinal cord injury. No helmet made of earthly materials could absorb that much impact energy without transferring a fatal amount of force to the spinal column. I consider the HANS system to be very good, and I don't think even that could be made good enough to have saved poor Surtees in this accident.WhiteBlue wrote:One could also look into making helmets even stronger.