Sorry, but diggers were not designed for gravel traps, but for irregular terrains where they need a good clearance to climb/descend ramps, and also to do not get stuck with rain and mudSectorOne wrote:They need the ground clearance because of the gravel traps. If you start building safe zones around the vehicles you increase the chance of them to get stuck. So when one is stuck you now have a bigger problem.Andres125sx wrote:Diggers usually work on very rough environements with very irregular terrain, mud, etc. so they need very good clearance. Not the case when they´re on a track, so they don´t need that front/rear clearance at all, those that work on tracks could use bumpers all around perfectly
Gravel traps are a very easy terrain for diggers, flat and no mud, they could use bumpers all around perfectly.
Million dollars? We´re talking about soldering some bumpers to the crane, they do not need to be road homologated, with a good soldering work tested properly it´s more than enoughSectorOne wrote:I´d also like to know your thought process when you decide between modifying a truck for millions of dollars
And since they´re owned by the track, any series racing at that track will benefit from safer cranes
Maybe if you start reading what you´re replying....SectorOne wrote:I´d also like to know your thought process when you decide between modifying a truck for millions of dollars (which it should be said are trucks owned by the track, not FIA) to a 60km/h slow zone.
I just want to know how you come up with an answer that is several orders of magnitude more expensive, won´t stop F1 cars hitting solid objects at well over 100km/h and is just generally a huge hassle to do as opposed to a system already in place in motorsport, tried and tested with success that would even allow the Safety Car to stay in 99% of the times because it´s rendered useless.
How does these barriers increase the safety of the marshals when F1 cars are hauling at them at over 100km/h?
Speed limited sector is the best idea when raining, but when it´s dry it´s overkilled IMHO. For those situations safer cranes will be more than enough I think. But with heavy rain limited sectors will be the best hands down. And I don´t think they need anything special to implement it, FIA could check after the race with telemetry. If someone broke the rule, heavy penalization for next race or disqualifying from this one. That should be more than enoughAndres125sx wrote:I personally think best option would be using bumpers for the cranes (that´s a must no matter what more options are used), I´d force Pirelli to develop his wet tires much more, new regulation about minimal free height, and maybe limiting track speed when situation is very difficult like when hard rain.
Double yellows are some sort of a joke right now, in a sport where half a second is too much, you can´t expect drivers will slow down too much with double yellows if it´s no specified how much they must slow down
I hope you feel better nowSectorOne wrote:I´m dying to know this.