DChemTech wrote: ↑24 Oct 2023, 08:36
I just don't think there is any problem. Track limits = white lines. No vague exceptions.
The issue isn't what constitutes track limits, but where they should be placed, and how we should police them. Nobody is arguing where the limits are. Just whether they are placed appropriately, and how we can best make sure they're policed (or self-policed) without it being an insurmountable workload for the race stewards.
A lot of people in this thread is in favor of automated systems. I'm too, if it can be made to work reliably, but there's a lot of challenges i think people aren't considering (or are too easily dismissing) with automated systems, including cost, and - as i pointed out - the fact that we may sometimes want to change them for various reasons (like Qatar, in an effort to ensure that tires weren't blowing up).
To me, an automated system should:
- Work reliably and precisely with cars of all shapes and sizes.
- Be capable of dealing with adjustments to the track.
- Not require significant hardware changes if something changes (car sizes, track limits) to keep costs down.
- Work with multiple (but maybe not all) racing series, and not just F1.
- Work in different conditions, including in adverse weather, daytime/nighttime, in direct sunlight etc.
- Be shielded from accidents - it shouldn't be possible for a car to hit the system and break it (unless the car has an insane accident, like Alex Peroni flying in F3 at Monza 2019). Similarly, if the system is placed on the cars, it shouldn't be in easy to break areas of the car (like the mirrors).
If a system can't satisfy the above, or at least most of it, then we need to find another solution for problematic tracks in my opinion.
Edit: Other desireable features might be that the system can detect which car breached track limits, so the driver can get instant feedback in the cockpit. This is nice, but not a requirement.