Hey
If I remember right I've seen an official telemetry document of the 94 Senna crash released by the Williams team a few years ago.
With other words, I'm very sure I did.
Anybody of you knows where I can find that?
I have never seen said document, but I would urge you to post it here should you find it at a later time. I'm sure there are many people that would be interested.SennaFanForever wrote:Hey
If I remember right I've seen an official telemetry document of the 94 Senna crash released by the Williams team a few years ago.
With other words, I'm very sure I did.
Anybody of you knows where I can find that?
That would tend to happen to delicate electronics of that era when a sledgehammer accidentally falls off a high work bench right on top of it. Several times.......it was not only physically smashed for some mysterious reason
Interesting video. First i've seen of this one.stefan_ wrote:I don't remember seeing anything telemetry-related to the crash other than this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9NoKVrxw14Y
I have always believed this. Prost, Ron Dennis and the majority of others think it was some sort of mechanical failure. However, Damon Hill thought it was driver error, and people who's opinion I respect I have read thought it was tyre pressure. We will never know for sure.himey wrote:Senna's steering column snapped at the weld point.
Didn't he sustain several lethal injuries to the head? He wouldn't have walked away just because of the damage sudden deceleration would have caused to his brain. And if I remember correctly the basal part of the cranium also was fractured, so the suspension was only one of the death causing things.stefan_ wrote:Telemetry or no telemetry, snapped steering column or not, Williams messing up the black box or not, we have to cope with the fact that a very big part of the tragic outcome of that accident was bad luck. If the suspension arm had a +/- 5cm diferent direction on the vertical axis and he would have just walked away from it.
It wasn't tyre pressure.sennafan24 wrote:I have always believed this. Prost, Ron Dennis and the majority of others think it was some sort of mechanical failure. However, Damon Hill thought it was driver error, and people who's opinion I respect I have read thought it was tyre pressure. We will never know for sure.himey wrote:Senna's steering column snapped at the weld point.
There are some nutjob conspiracy theories out there though.
.the user wrote:Didn't he sustain several lethal injuries to the head? He wouldn't have walked away just because of the damage sudden deceleration would have caused to his brain. And if I remember correctly the basal part of the cranium also was fractured, so the suspension was only one of the death causing things.stefan_ wrote:Telemetry or no telemetry, snapped steering column or not, Williams messing up the black box or not, we have to cope with the fact that a very big part of the tragic outcome of that accident was bad luck. If the suspension arm had a +/- 5cm diferent direction on the vertical axis and he would have just walked away from it.
Look at Martin Donnelly's crash - car broken in half, wheels and wishbones flying away, driver trown away still strapped in the seat and he got away alive.the user wrote:Didn't he sustain several lethal injuries to the head? He wouldn't have walked away just because of the damage sudden deceleration would have caused to his brain. And if I remember correctly the basal part of the cranium also was fractured, so the suspension was only one of the death causing things.stefan_ wrote:Telemetry or no telemetry, snapped steering column or not, Williams messing up the black box or not, we have to cope with the fact that a very big part of the tragic outcome of that accident was bad luck. If the suspension arm had a +/- 5cm diferent direction on the vertical axis and he would have just walked away from it.