Yes. Many other racing series do this. Making pit stops part of the competitive process virtually ensures that mistakes will occur, especially as the teams strive to make their pit process faster and faster. It's all very exciting for us fans today. Sometimes it seems the cars never even stop completely before all four tires are changed and they start rolling again.WhiteBlue wrote:Another solution would be a mandatory minimum pit stop time of 5 s and standard wheel fixtures.
As Scotty86 said: "So as per usual it seems the symptoms rather than the causes of the problems are being dealt with...."
There are many, many aspects of a race that are negatively impacted by the lack of an enforced minimum pit stop time. Refueliing, for example. Isn't it fairly idiotic to force the cars to run on full tanks at the start of the race just because the sport cannot devise a safe way to add fuel to the cars?
No minimum pit stop time has cost us the strategy factor in racing, as teams used to have to devise the best plan to balance the faster speeds allowed by carrying less fuel against the time required to make a pit stop. And that has led to all this silliness about Bernie-tires that artificially self destruct after 7 laps or so.
Give them a minimum time they must be stationary in the pits, reduce the number of crew members allowed to work on the refueling/tire changes and add a function to the on board computers that limits car speed to 20 kph for the first 100 meters and I think safety would be dramatically increased while re-instating some of the strategic elements that USED to be part of racing.
Maybe I am just old and yearning for the "old days", but I think a sport that bills itself as the "smartest guys in the room" when it comes to auto racing could devise a lot more intelligent approach than what they have created today.
Stupidity is as stupidity does.....