The tire bouncing around is the part that troubles me the most.bhallg2k wrote:Conor Daly's ride in Monaco.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXszF6m_ew8[/youtube]
Given the damage to that car I struggle to see any tethering system working well enough to keep the wheel with the car but away from the driver. In this instance the severed wheel was above the catch fencing with the fence cutting its way through the suspension and tether.bhallg2k wrote:The tire bouncing around is the part that troubles me the most.
bhallg2k wrote:@myurr
I absolutely agree that some situations in racing, due to its very nature, will be unavoidable. But, having seen the way wheel tethers are secured to F1 cars - not exactly robust - I can't imagine that GP3, or any other lower formula, has better standards. At the very least, I think these connections should be made to be much more secure.
It's not just drivers who are in danger. That wheel could have easily struck a corner marshal here.
Problem with this design is if it ends resting upsidedown there is no way for the driver to exit.machin wrote:Here's another option:-
In this a "slanted forward" carbon fibre hoop runs in front of the driver's fore head. The hoop would stop large heavy objects (like wheels) hitting the driver's helmet, without obscuring his view. The hoop could also incorporate the side head protection currently built into the pop out collar. A screen could be built between the hoop and collar to protect against small flying debris. The whole screen and hoop would hinge from its forward edge and out of the way to let the driver out. The top of the driver's helmet would still be "open" so you can see who is who. The hoop would also be a convenient place to mount a forward facing TV camera.
you must be mad. We had explosively severed chutes on test planes. When not in the air they have to be stored in an armored cabinet and must be treated as a live ordnance. It would be a pretty dumb idea to add a potential explosive element to a crash. what if a wheel is severed during contact with another car right next to the driver?MIKEY_! wrote:Roulette element of the pitstops with explosively deflating tires can be solved by placing the break-away detonator in the uprights (the bit that has the brakes attached to it) the explosive will only trigger when that component separates from the chassis. Of course that means if a wheel is not attached properly (in a pitstop) and falls of it will not deflate. Maybe a remote secondary detonator is required in the cockpit for use in such a situation.
Can the tire still reach the drivers head like how senna was killed without the tethers failing?
Would it not be possible to use a shaped charge directed into the inside of the rim, firing directly into a specifically designed weak point?flynfrog wrote:you must be mad. We had explosively severed chutes on test planes. When not in the air they have to be stored in an armored cabinet and must be treated as a live ordnance. It would be a pretty dumb idea to add a potential explosive element to a crash. what if a wheel is severed during contact with another car right next to the driver?
The problem in this case was that the wheel ended up on one side of the catch fencing, the car on the other. In order for the tether to have then dragged the wheel back through the fence, it would need to be stronger than the fence itself, be strong enough to rip the wheel back up and over the fence, or to hang the entire weight of the car over the top of the fence whilst absorbing all the energy and momentum of the car. In this specific instance I'm not sure that any of those situations are desirable or practical.bhallg2k wrote:I only pointed out the initial bounce to show proximity. I missed the part where another car struck it on the rebound.
I'm not necessarily of the mind that canopies or anything of the sort should be mandated on open-cockpit cars. But, I see no reason why wheel tethers should not be made more robust. The technology exists to do so easily.
Kevlar has a tensile strength of about 52,000 psi. Tether failures almost always seem to be the result of the tether being ripped from its anchor(s), which in most cases is little more than two or three tiny Ti screws, rather than being ripped apart itself. I think the anchors should be integrated into both the chassis and the uprights, instead of being superfluously tacked on.
an air bag is much a much smaller charge than it would take to sever a wheel. Im sure you could come up with some sort of shape charge but you are still running a pack of cars of cars at high speeds with bombs on each wheel. A dump valve would be a much better plan.myurr wrote:Would it not be possible to use a shaped charge directed into the inside of the rim, firing directly into a specifically designed weak point?flynfrog wrote:you must be mad. We had explosively severed chutes on test planes. When not in the air they have to be stored in an armored cabinet and must be treated as a live ordnance. It would be a pretty dumb idea to add a potential explosive element to a crash. what if a wheel is severed during contact with another car right next to the driver?
There must be some way to enable the tyre to rapidly deflate in the event that it becomes detached from the car.
Edit: Don't forget that airbags are also explosive devices and yet they are carried in pretty much every production car including being directly in front of the drivers head next to their hands. Explosives are dangerous but can be used to improve safety.