Watch his head and then tell me that wasn't hard, especially on someone that was very very likely unconscious.
I don't know why his head moved so far to the front and I never said anything about it.
Maybe it was just because he was unconscious.
But I don't think it was because the impact was to heavy, Reson: There where tire wall, with guard rail behind and the car has a crash structure.
But we have seen impacts just into guard rails or even solid wall and the driver had no injuries from that. So we have seen impacts with more G loads.
That’s why I said the tires-walls are relatively soft.
The car did have no grip, he ran over grass and then hit the run off area obviously covered in dust from what was shown on the tires.
Of course do the tires not have grip while they are on the grass,
but they had enough grip to start spinning again several times.
And that can just happen when you don't operate the brakes fully.
The brakes can lock the tires easily.
So that is the proof for Massa not pressing the brakes hard enough.
Also saying that the HANS device was not damaged is also pure speculation
Maybe but saying it was damaged is even more speculation.
The reason: The HANS device is located lower in the car and it is half covered from the cars head protection on the side of the cockpit.
The spring hit the helmet and the head protection, so it can't hit the HANS on the same time.
Ok maybe it can hit the connection between helmet and HANS, I must check out where this is located and how it looks like.
It is the only possible way to damage the HANS.
And it would still be just damaged on one side, so the head would have be turned to the left during the impact.