Trying to pass someone guarantees a DNF, right?godlameroso wrote:If Rosberg stays in front of Hamilton after the 3rd corner there's a good chance he'll stay in front, and Hamilton could DNF trying to pass him. An agressive two stop strategy doing two stints on super softs and a short one on softs could be a good way to make up ground. Otherwise the one stop seems to be the most efficient way around, I'd say the super softs are good for about 10-12 laps depending on how you manage them, and from there the soft can easily take you the rest of the way. Everyone else that tries a one stopper is going to be struggling at the end of their first stint, and towards the end of the race.
Its not a new weakness, once again it is showing how exposed the drivers head is.turbof1 wrote:I think the most important issue is that the Tecpro barrier could have hit Sainz his head or perhaps even worse: squeeze his head between the barrier and back of the cockpit. Don't get me wrong: I'm hugely glad that none of that happened, and that the barriers did their job actually.Jonnycraig wrote:Maybe I'm missing the point, but Sainz has crashed at the fastest part of the track with very little speed scrubbed off at the point of impact, and been left completely uninjured. He literally could've and would've walked back to the garage if it weren't for the understandable abundance of caution by medics. The Tecpro has absorbed so much energy that a car impacting head on at 150+mph has 'only' partially breached the single skin metal barriers behind.Just_a_fan wrote:Cue half a dozen threads about how the cars must be redesigned because of this crash.
You can't design the car for every crash eventuality. You can change the barriers though - should be possible to do that to prevent submarining whilst keeping the barrier effective for other race series etc.
As seen with a very similar impact for De Jong at Spa, the Tecpro being lifted as it absorbs energy in neither track, nor car specific. Only needing to replace a small piece of barrier when a car hits head on at that speed and the driver completely fine is a best case outcome in all respects.
So the point is that the crash exposed a very vulnerable point, which luckily did not mattered this time. It's not one thing contributing to this, but several: a low nose, rake, and the issue that breaking the suspension lowers the nose further, and probably a weakness to this kind of submarining in the shape of the tecpro barrier.
Best news of the weekend so far =D>turbof1 wrote:Sainz will be allowed to race tomorrow: http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2015/10/10/s ... n-to-race/
The big question is will Hamilton play the averages or go for broke? The sensible approach is to take a safe second place behind Rosberg. Hamilton only needs to finish second at each race to take the title. A DNF opens the title up to the other two.godlameroso wrote:If Rosberg stays in front of Hamilton after the 3rd corner there's a good chance he'll stay in front, and Hamilton could DNF trying to pass him. An agressive two stop strategy doing two stints on super softs and a short one on softs could be a good way to make up ground. Otherwise the one stop seems to be the most efficient way around, I'd say the super softs are good for about 10-12 laps depending on how you manage them, and from there the soft can easily take you the rest of the way. Everyone else that tries a one stopper is going to be struggling at the end of their first stint, and towards the end of the race.
Andres125sx wrote:Best news of the weekend so far =D>turbof1 wrote:Sainz will be allowed to race tomorrow: http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2015/10/10/s ... n-to-race/
About the barriers, I agree lifting and hitting drivers helmet is a risk, but as some of you already posted that can´t be prevented because they can´t be secured to the ground or they wouldn´t decrease deceleration so well.
I´m a big defensor of closed cockpits, but in this case I don´t think this is a big problem. It is not a solid object hitting drivers helmet, it´s a techpro barrier (soft) so that´s not a huge problem, helmets should cope with that perfectly