After the last Qatar race, and not for the first time this season, we have the track limits discussion...
First of all, a link to a couple of recent treads on the matter:
viewtopic.php?t=29873
viewtopic.php?t=29448
Second, feel free to use this to discuss track limits in general.
And now an idea that I think would be easy, fast, cheap, low tech, and not perfect. (perfect being the enemy of the good).
Take a typical corner: in, say, 5 different positions, you install a laser trap, just a pointer and a sensor, or maybe laser pointer, reflector and sensor, drawing a tangent to the corner 1.8 (1.82?) m outside the while line, about 30 cm high. These are cheap and easy to install and adjust and test, say the Thursday before the race.
If anything cuts the beam, a pic is automatically taken and sent to race control. And then a human checks it. I reckon that a couple of humans could keep up with a race or a Q session in almost real time, but all "beam cuts" are registered, with position, pic and time stamp. So they can be checked later if needed.
Now, 5 beams per corner is not perfect, and might miss a 2 cm, 0.1 second excursion of the line, but it is consistent, transparent to all and it will catch any large excursions. Place a couple extra in a couple of strategic positions if you want. The beams become the race track limits, and one could even paint the lines, or paint pointers, to reflect this.
With a certain time threshold, they should work even in the rain, and it is easy enough to have a "is there a car in the pic?" filter for false positives.
The sensors could work at any height of the tire, so corners with moderate slope changes can also be covered, and if needed, a reflector can be placed in a special place.
Not 100% fail-proof, not 100% precise, and not always 100% fair (hence the human in the loop), but I think a F1 race can afford a 100 or so automatic laser traps, my elevator can afford a few, so...
Thoughts?
Here an example of what 5 traps could achieve in a random corner, Suzuka, turn 2: