How is an AS failure any different to any other physical suspension failure?Giblet wrote:Zanardi had a really bad crash when his AS system had a leak causing his car to bottom and hard into the wall. There were other issues aside of cost and performance. How would that keep from happening again?
I can tell you what i'd do.Ciro Pabón wrote:Stuff
The difference is if on damper/spring fails, one corner of the car unloads. An F1 car can usually limp back to the pits on 3 wheels. There is still some semblance of control. In an AS setup, the hydraulic pressure holds the car "up", so if one line goes, the whole system fails, and the car becomes a 180mph sled. Not very cool when trying to take a corner. This is also what happened to Senna, although not because of the AS. Cars bottoming out is one of the most dangerous things that can happen. The kind of accident that MS had when he broke his legs was similar. Massa recentlty going straight off into the wall, again, not because of AS, but an AS like straight off hit.djos wrote:How is an AS failure any different to any other physical suspension failure?Giblet wrote:Zanardi had a really bad crash when his AS system had a leak causing his car to bottom and hard into the wall. There were other issues aside of cost and performance. How would that keep from happening again?
You can't let a single incident (or even some isolated incidents) taint an entire technology. The point is going through Eau Rouge flat out, a spring/damper fails on a standard car, you are going to to be in a pretty mighty accident. The point is the active system still had springs to keep the car up in the event of a failure and whilst the system was off. It's just under the massive aero loads they werernt enough. Apart from Zanardi's crash, I can't think of another crash directly caused by active ride failure.Giblet wrote:djos wrote:Giblet wrote: This is why I wonder why people think it is such a good idea to bring back, nobody here is listening to what we learned in the past, which is why I brought up Zanardi in the Lotus with the AS. Just testing the system can be dangerous to the driver, because when there is an AS failure, it can be catastrophic.
I think the point he was making was referring to the link he posted. It's basically Massa onboard when he gets clouted by the spring.Giblet wrote:Yes it was AS, it was Lotus's active car. Look it up before you debate it, like I did. I'm not spouting crap here bud That crash was a direct result of his AS hydraulics failing.
I read about in one of this months current mags.
By the end of 1991 he had also been blooded in Formula One: two starts for Jordan his reward for a strong F3000 campaign.
For 1992 Zanardi had to be content with guest drives for Minardi, replacing the injured Christian Fittipaldi. In the off-season, he tested for Benetton, but contracted with Lotus for 1993. Zanardi compared reasonably to teammate Johnny Herbert and was important in fine-tuning the team's active suspension system, scoring his first ever F1 point at the Brazilian Grand Prix. However, his season ended prematurely after he suffered a terrible crash during practice for the Belgian Grand Prix.
Not a single driver has lost his life since Imola 1994, and before that it was a semi regular occurrence. in fact, the majority of major crashes involve walking away, or minor injuries.flynfrog wrote:[youtube]hTckyf4uT64[/youtube]
No AS involved
You talk about things we could learn from it is that a knee jerk reaction is never a good one. Look at the rules put in place after Senna crashed. Most of them did not make the cars any safer
The changes were mostly to do with trackside saftey, HANS (probably the biggest life saver) and improved helmets and cockpit protection.Giblet wrote:Not a single river has lost his life since Imola 1994, and before that it was a semi regular occurrence. in fact, the majority of major crashes involve walking away, or minor injuries.
I could make a big list of drivers who would likely be dead right now if it wasn't for the changes put in place. Kubica, Schumi, Rubens, Massa,etc....
Giblet wrote:I've made my points of :AS too pricey in modern F1 climate to implement for everyone, AS can be dangerous, as proved in the past, AS takes focus away from driver skill (Makes them easier to drive)
I don't need to argue them anymore, that's it
With that last statement giblet, I guess you mean that you have made your opinion clear?Giblet wrote:For the record, AS was not banned as part of the sweeping changes made after 1994. It was banned for all the reasons I have already stated
I've made my points of :AS too pricey in modern F1 climate to implement for everyone, AS can be dangerous, as proved in the past, AS takes focus away from driver skill (Makes them easier to drive)
I don't need to argue them anymore, that's it
looks like its pretty even nearly 50 / 50.The_Man wrote:Wrong place to have this pole mate;
It'll be pretty one sided NO.
Active suspension should remain banned for the same reason FIA banned traction control. Let these highly paid drivers earn their salary.