Bianchi, Senna and Ratzenberger's deaths were all caused by speed in a corner.ChrisM40 wrote:Lots of people moan about safety and the desire to keep speeds down to prevent another tragedy. When was the last cornering speed related tragedy?? It wasn't Biachi, or De Villota, or Senna or Ratzenberger...
Im pretty sure the deaths were caused by coming to a stop very quickly.Moose wrote:Bianchi, Senna and Ratzenberger's deaths were all caused by speed in a corner.ChrisM40 wrote:Lots of people moan about safety and the desire to keep speeds down to prevent another tragedy. When was the last cornering speed related tragedy?? It wasn't Biachi, or De Villota, or Senna or Ratzenberger...
Bianchi was caused by bad car removal procedure.Moose wrote: Bianchi, Senna and Ratzenberger's deaths were all caused by speed in a corner.
No they werent. Bianchi aquaplaned off at relatively low speed, Sennas (still contested I believe) was either a breakage, or the car bottoming out possibly due to rules changes (ironically), Ratzenburgers car never even started to turn.Moose wrote:Bianchi, Senna and Ratzenberger's deaths were all caused by speed in a corner.ChrisM40 wrote:Lots of people moan about safety and the desire to keep speeds down to prevent another tragedy. When was the last cornering speed related tragedy?? It wasn't Biachi, or De Villota, or Senna or Ratzenberger...
If you want to think it that way ok, speed itself don´t kill anyone, but speed combined with some sort of problem (car failure, aquaplanning, etc.) is a problem when tracks are not designed for 4-5G cornering.ChrisM40 wrote:No they werent. Bianchi aquaplaned off at relatively low speed, Sennas (still contested I believe) was either a breakage, or the car bottoming out possibly due to rules changes (ironically), Ratzenburgers car never even started to turn.
That´s what they´re doing for some years. Do you know Tilkedroms? They´re criticized all around, but they´re designed to allow safe and fast cornering speeds. The only problem is there are tracks like Suzuka (hate to say this because Suzuka is my favourite track), Monaco, Montreal or Singapore in the calendar so cornering speeds must be controlledChrisM40 wrote:Stop slowing down the cars for a theoretical problem that hasn't happened, and instead improve the track safety.
In the case of the DeltaWing, the strategy makes sense. If one car among many others is far less sensitive to "dirty air," then it can benefit from the resulting performance differentiation. But, if all cars are more or less the same by design, any moves to combat "dirty air" will just shift the problem to a different area.mrluke wrote:Should be a demonstration from the delta wing where part of their design process was to create cars that could follow each other ad avoid the dirty air problem. This goes back to when the delta wing was a concept for indy car.
I think its pretty relevant to the discussion and one of their solutions to the dirty air was to focus on underbody aero rather than wings.
This is what has led me to believe that track modification is the only solution. NASCAR works because oval tracks can have as many as four different racing lines, and NASCAR fans complain when there aren't hundreds of instances of overtaking throughout a race.bhall II wrote:
Sorry but this does not make sense to me. Dirty air only affects the trailing car, same as DRSbhall II wrote: In the case of the DeltaWing, the strategy makes sense. If one car among many others is far less sensitive to "dirty air," then it can benefit from the resulting performance differentiation. But, if all cars are more or less the same by design, any moves to combat "dirty air" will just shift the problem to a different area.
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DRS works, because it only affects the trailing car.
Forget "dirty air" as a problem, because it's one that cannot be solved until someone discovers how to enable an object to pass through the atmosphere without displacing any air whatsoever, a feat that will be worthy of several Nobel Prizes. Absent that, you have to look elsewhere for solutions to facilitate easier overtaking.Andres125sx wrote:Minimizing dirty air problem would provide real battles, even if overtakes per GP are a small fraction, but at least we´d see some battles instead of the fastest car with the fastest driver saying it´s imposible to even try because of dirty air
And I don't think you'd have to do that for every corner, just the ones that lead onto, or come after, longer straights. But, I know very little about track design. So, I'm not exactly sure.You wrote:If the normal line keep level, but you provide a little banking in the outside of the corner, there would be more than one line, the usual and the outer one taking advantage of the little banking, so drivers will have more than one line to choose and overtaking will be easier.
I thought it was just a bizarre way to demonstrate flow patterns around the DeltaWing Le Mans car...mrluke wrote:The delta wing video was from the proposal to provide a Delta wing chassis is the new spec chassis for indy car.
With the powerful engines Formula One is used the have, a certain amount of downforce is simply necessity. Without it the cars would simply be uncontrollable. From a normative point of view downforce is also desirable or even a necessity. Without downforce lap times improve when a car is in the wake of another. Consequently, cars naturally close up and a slower car could thus easily pass a faster one.Tim.Wright wrote:If you are happy with F1 lapping circa 20 sec slower then that would be one possible solution.