Well the litigation is soon to be huge and will change that tune quick. When a wheel or car part or car goes into the stands and kills spectators the reaction will make the Swiss reaction to the LeMans disaster of 1955 look like a walk in the park. America is the place that thinks groping passengers is an acceptable alternative to the sane methods used in the rest of the world. All because of fear. Wait until an insurance company has to pay out. They will cancel all policies everywhere pending new onerous standards and steep rate hikes. You think the Italians were crazy for wanting to jail Patrick Head and company? Wait until you see Americans overreact. We are the best in the world at it.hardingfv32 wrote:Just a sound business model. Safety is really not an issue in no one is racing. What you want is not affordable to the USA open wheel oval racing industry. So you make a choice of some level of lower safety. If the insurance companies are happy with your choices, that pretty much means that a litigious society is too.
Brian
We have had spectators injured in recent years, maybe even a death, but nothing has noticeably changed. The injured spectators always sue and collect, but the insurance companies seem to be satisfied with the situation. Attending any sporting event in America is NOT an "at your own risk" proposition. It might be for participants, but even some drivers estates have successfully sued for damages.gcdugas wrote:Well the litigation is soon to be huge and will change that tune quick. When a wheel or car part or car goes into the stands and kills spectators the reaction will make the Swiss reaction to the LeMans disaster of 1955 look like a walk in the park. America is the place that thinks groping passengers is an acceptable alternative to the sane methods used in the rest of the world. All because of fear. Wait until an insurance company has to pay out. They will cancel all policies everywhere pending new onerous standards and steep rate hikes.
More like a total crap attitude to opinions other than your own.WhiteBlue wrote:Total crap attitude towards safety, IMO.
You can't be farer from the truth. My comparison is essentially about the attitude between the two series. I'm looking very specifically into the safety needs of IRL racing.bhallg2k wrote:You don't seem to recognize that your constant comparisons between F1 and the IRL are nothing more than pompous acts of grandstanding against something you simply don't like.
WhiteBlue wrote:You can't be farer from the truth. My comparison is essentially about the attitude between the two series. I'm looking very specifically into the safety needs of IRL racing.bhallg2k wrote:You don't seem to recognize that your constant comparisons between F1 and the IRL are nothing more than pompous acts of grandstanding against something you simply don't like.
For instance I'm not asking to forbid all ovals. I just want a minimum track length and a number of cars on track that is significantly more safe than the existing standards.
I want the banking reduced to FiA standards and I am truly convinced that the fence and wall system has big improvement potential. With work being done in all three areas I would accept a report to be written in good faith. But the IRL report does nothing to improve the safety critical aspects and simply delivers a whitewash. That is simply not acceptable because the action I'm asking for would save lives.
I can safely say none of this is ever going to happen nor that there is any reason to think that it would save more lives. You are simply too narrow minded to grasp the issues of this topic.WhiteBlue wrote: I just want a minimum track length and a number of cars on track that is significantly more safe than the existing standards.
I want the banking reduced to FiA standards and I am truly convinced that the fence and wall system has big improvement potential. With work being done in all three areas I would accept a report to be written in good faith. But the IRL report does nothing to improve the safety critical aspects and simply delivers a whitewash. That is simply not acceptable because the action I'm asking for would save lives.
Very Good. =D>bhallg2k wrote:WB, I'm growing more and more convinced that you only believe the words that come out of your mouth. Or, to steal a few lyrics, "You hear only what you want to hear, and only know what you've heard."
(That's not a personal attack. It's a frustrated attempt to break through dense ice.)
Anyone who makes a comparison between F1 and the IRL is grasping at straws, because their similarities begin and end with four open wheels. The racing is different, strategies are different, the driving styles are different, the vehicle dynamics are different.
You don't seem to recognize that your constant comparisons between F1 and the IRL are nothing more than pompous acts of grandstanding against something you simply don't like. That's all it is. Because anyone who's serious about making changes to improve safety in the IRL would focus on the IRL and its unique characteristics as opposed to drawing parallels that don't really exist.
Put another way: you can't learn how to bowl by playing baseball.
Understand this WB...Nobody cares what you want. Not the IRL, the FIA or cetrtainly not me.I just want a minimum track length and a number of cars on track that is significantly more safe than the existing standards.
1) There is no concern about knee jerk reactions in this case. There is simply no money available to change anything at this point. They are lucky to find circuits to race at as it is without asking anything more from the circuit owners.myurr wrote:I'm not a fan of oval racing or IRL but I respect the fact that many people are, and I would hate there to be a knee jerk reaction that unnecessarily kills that form of racing or neuters it enough to cause a slow and steady decline in popularity.