BTS wrote:May be Fernando realised there was something wrong and decided to steer to the right to free the racing line and in a view to park it along the wall and whatever was wrong lead to this crash?
That thought crossed my mind also. It would fill in the gaps pretty well. For instance Alonso after having some unbalance decides to clear the racing line for Vettel. Throttle gets stuck (or ers is engaged) and powers him into the wall. It would match the absence of rear wheel skid marks. The surprise factor pretty much rules out any effective counteraction.
But then again there are many different scenario's which could cause or contribute to the crash. Being distracted by radio communication. A teared up eye like hamilton in Monaco. Even things like mistaking the corner for a different corner and aiming for a non existing apex (it has happened before).
And perhaps we will never know. I mean we will for instance never know why Villota accelerated into the back of a truck. Too many episodes of CSI has fed us with the idea that every accident investigation leads to a logical conclusion.
andartop wrote:I mean, even if Alonso himself paid you a visit and got to know the Mrs and the kids and had dinner with you and then sat down and explained to you that there is really nothing more to it, you would be back here the moment he was out the door posting that for Alonso himself to get into the trouble of coming all the way where you live and spending a whole evening with you trying to convince you there is nothing more to it, you MUST BE ON TO SOMETHING!!!!
So basically what your saing is that a F1 driver and a Journo who spends his professional life trackside got it wrong and it is a completely normal crash?
I think everyone agrees this was a strange crash. To have a car veer off in the dry mid corner and go straight into the inner wall leaving one skid mark is unusual. That it injures a driver makes it worthwile to investigate.
for that reason the FIA should investigate. Even if it doesn't reveal the exact contributors to the crash it can lead to new insights that contribute to safety. One of the results could be (just as an example) the conclusion that they're currently making the suspensions so strong that they render the side crash structures inneffective at these velocities.
With regards to conspiracy theories. F1 is a strange club and a lot has been going on behind the scenes. But since the seventies they have not compromised on driver or public safety. That goes both for the teams as the organisation. It is one thing to steal information from a team in order to gain a few hundreds, it is another to withold information may affect the safety of all drivers.
I think everyone can rest assured that that would not happen. The only thing that I may hold against McLaren is that they released too strong an statement before concluding the investigation. But from my own experience I also know the temptation and the pressure that the PR people put on you to make statements when doing an investigation. Especially when the outside world is conducting its own "investigation".
I guess we have to be patient. But on the other hand puzzling with a few pieces of information trying to deduct a story is an interesting pass-time, and I'm guilty.