I mentioned this earlier in the thread, but, as is the norm around here these days, histrionics took over, and it went unnoticed. But if you want to start talking about making F1 safer to prevent these type of "freak" accidents from occurring, the best place to start, one would think, would be to simply not use parts that are known to be potentially unsafe.Rubens Barrichello wrote:I lost the whole central damper of the car. The car this morning had a lot of fuel and it felt quite good. This afternoon it felt a bit strange, vertically the car was moving a bit. And we suspected since the beginning of qualifying that it was starting to go. Eventually it went completely on that lap, because I had a lap of traffic which I had to abort and that lap, as soon as I braked for Turn 1, it was very, very bad. I still did an okay time through sector one, but when I went into Turn 3 I felt the rear collapse.
Theres video showing the spring coming off of Barrichello's car, and putting all the footage together shows that Massa encountered that spring just a few seconds later.xpensive wrote:Ignorant question here; Is it 100% confirmed what object hit Massa and from which car? Has here been an investigation on how that piece came adrift?
I've been saying this over and over and over again, and I've gotten told to basically shut up it was an accident. And Ill say this again, had the spring come off and killed Massa every single person here would agree with what I've said repeatedly.bhallg2k wrote:I mentioned this earlier in the thread, but, as is the norm around here these days, histrionics took over, and it went unnoticed. But if you want to start talking about making F1 safer to prevent these type of "freak" accidents from occurring, the best place to start, one would think, would be to simply not use parts that are known to be potentially unsafe.Rubens Barrichello wrote:I lost the whole central damper of the car. The car this morning had a lot of fuel and it felt quite good. This afternoon it felt a bit strange, vertically the car was moving a bit. And we suspected since the beginning of qualifying that it was starting to go. Eventually it went completely on that lap, because I had a lap of traffic which I had to abort and that lap, as soon as I braked for Turn 1, it was very, very bad. I still did an okay time through sector one, but when I went into Turn 3 I felt the rear collapse.
It's unbelievable that Brawn would send a car out whose suspension was suspected to be on the brink of failure. I'm sure all of us could think of at least a half-dozen ways in which that spring's on-track failure could result in something tragic, even beyond what did occur.
In my opinion, Brawn was negligent and deserves some form of reprimand. I mean, if Renault gets hit with a one-race suspension for failing to properly secure Alonso's wheel, surely Brawn deserves the same, if not more, for failing to address a safety problem they seemed to know they had.
Yup, historically I can't think of a time when a modern F1 suspension has had such a failure. Toyota had a rear suspension failure in Brazil one year if I remember correctly and the car simply hit the ground with sparks shooting out the back like someone had lit a firework. The suspension never fell apart.modbaraban wrote:PS: broken suspension doesn't fall apart in most cases.
Speak for yourself. By the way, do you blame Clarke for killing Surtees?Ray wrote:had the spring come off and killed Massa every single person here would agree with what I've said repeatedly.
I'll speak for Ray, a fellow South Carolinian.modbaraban wrote:Speak for yourself. By the way, do you blame Clarke for killing Surtees?Ray wrote:had the spring come off and killed Massa every single person here would agree with what I've said repeatedly.
How about that: had it been Alonso's wheel that killed Surtees, would you consider blaming Alonso and Renault for a tragedy that could have been avoided?modbaraban wrote:By the way, do you blame Clarke for killing Surtees?