Tim.Wright wrote:In terms of risk management, they've done the minimum possible.
[...]
Basically admitting that the hardware isn't safe, the procedure itself isn't safe and they can't or aren't willing to change either of these so the pit crew are going to need better fire protection because they are going to go up in flames again...
I don't have an opinion one way or the other about the specific solution chosen or about what it may or may not represent. My point is that NASCAR didn't just raise a white flag and proclaim, "This is impossible!" It's not.
Refueling in motorsport isn't some exotic practice, nor is it merely the province of the criminally insane. It's common throughout racing series all over the world, and I'm pretty confident that actuarial data would show it's just as safe as any other aspect of motor racing.
In any case, it appears safety wasn't even an issue in the the decision to scrap the idea...
Fox Sports wrote:Surprisingly, perhaps the main opposition to refueling was on the basis that it would be detrimental to the show, rather than cost or safety.
Data analyzed by various team strategists and presented at the meeting provided solid proof that refueling would not improve the racing – for example, in 2010, the year after it was stopped, there were twice as many overtaking moves as in the previous year.
Solid proof, my ass.
I can understand how a casual observer might associate refueling with processional racing. But, for the life of me, I don't know how anyone can look at hard data and draw the same conclusion.
Again...
As teams converge upon the optimum, which tends to equalize performance, overtaking declines. This is borne out in three ways: the gradual shift to V10s from 1984 to 1996-1998; the optimization of Pirelli-putty tires and DRS strategy from 2011 to present; and the unique, near-complete arrest of all change during the first three years of the unique, near-complete arrest of all engine development.
I think the increase in overtaking in 2010 was less about the refueling ban specifically than it was about the change itself. Were it not for the introduction of stupid tires and DRS, there's no reason to believe that overtaking wouldn't have decreased in 2011 as a result of further optimized hardware and strategy for the no-refueling era, because nothing suggests that such optimization ever leads to anything other than parity.
So, now these boneheads want to develop the quickest cars the world has ever seen
and needlessly haul around more fuel than is ever necessary for a routine stint between pit stops? Good luck paying for that ---!
(Too ranty?)