Andres125sx wrote: ↑09 May 2017, 11:32
Vyssion wrote: ↑28 Apr 2017, 10:18
My view is that the whole "we must do something!!" thing that is going on at the moment is a total and complete over reaction to "A FREAK ACCIDENT"... One driver dies within 20yrs since Senna's death....
One freak accident?
Jules Bianchi
María de Villota
Almost Massa
Dan Wheldom
Henry Surtees
Justin Wilson
And probably some other I can´t remind just now...
It´s not one I´m afraid, probably not Bianchi, but all the rest would be alive if closed canopies were used.
One is a coincidence, even two can be a coincidence. 6 in past decade cannot be a coincidence, it´s showing a trend, and when a safety problem trend is noticed, FIA job is making whatever neccessary to stop that trend and stop accidents with drivers being injured or killed because of that
Jules Bianchi
He hit a front end loader which was only within the track limits to recover another car which they couldn't reach from outside the boundary, while under yellow flags which he seemingly didn't slow down for or react to, in a rain-soaked track at dusk with poor visibility on a corner which is known to be particularly tricky in the dark and rain etc etc etc etc... not caused by debris.
María de Villota
In 2015, an official report compiled by the Health and Safety Executive concluded that De Villota had not received full guidance on how to stop the car, and was caught out by its anti-stall system, which activated as she attempted to brake to a standstill and pushed the car forward into the tail-lift of the team's service truck. Not caused by flying debris.
Filipe Massa
Spring lodged in helmet - helmet saved him... no canopy required. In addition, a halo would not have guaranteed to prevent that either
Dan Wheldom
Wheldon was involved in a 15-car accident on the 11th lap, in which his car flew approximately
325 feet (99 m) into the catchfence cockpit-first and landed back on the racing surface after his head hit a pole lining the track. Dunno about you, but a 100m flight ending upside down in something supposed to be aerodynamically glued to the race track seems to be the definition of the words "freak accident"
But again, it wasn't debris.
Henry Surtees
Surtees was hit on the head by a wheel from the car of Jack Clarke after Clarke spun into the wall exiting Westfield Bend. The wheel broke its tether and bounced back across the track into the following group of cars and collided with Surtees' helmet. The mass of the wheel assembly hitting his head was 29 kilograms (64 lb), but given the speed of his car (approximately 162 km/h) at the time the wheel struck, the impact yielded approximately 60,000 joules of kinetic energy. Yeah alright I'll give you this one.
Justin Wilson
Race leader Sage Karam crashed late in the race, sending debris airborne. The car ahead of him, driver James Jakes slowed down faster than Wilson did, so Wilson went to the outside to avoid contact with his car. At the same time, the nose cone from Karam's crashed car hit Wilson's helmet as he drove through the accident scene, and Wilson's car almost immediately veered left into the inside wall. Again, I'll give you this one.
Without going on and on about these, I dunno about you, but these ALL seem like "Freak Accidents" to me... A rogue wheel, accident that was avoided but debris was clipped on the way through, forgetting about anti-stall... blah blah...
You could argue that, yes in most cases, IF cars had a canopy/halo, then these deaths "may" not have happened. But you mention that "6 at least in the past decade" means that something should be done... I dunno about you, but I would struggle to name something which is so dangerous that has killed less people than 6 in a decade... I would take those odds on that 6 times out of all the hundreds of kilometers each car does with 20+ cars on the field every race across all racing formulas in the world with an open cockpit regulation with all the accidents, marshal accidents, debris from gravel pits or crashes or fans, etc etc etc.... only SIX people have died in TEN years??
Yeah nah... These are freak accidents and nothing should be done to "fix" them because you simply cannot prevent every "freak accident" from occurring. Of course they are each tragic and awful, but such is the danger of the sport. Isle of Mann has had hundreds of bikers die, but I have never heard of a "bubble bike" being needed because of this?
I remember back in Australia that there was some bloke who was batting in Cricket and the bowler threw a bouncer to him (basically no way to hit it, its done to intimidate the batsman). They do it all the time and its allowed. But this one whacked him on the side of the helmet and killed him anyways. There was all this hullaballoo about "we must ban the bouncer!!" and "we need to change the entire sport cause it isn't safe any more!!" when realistically, it was just a freak accident *shrug*... a terrible one, but no different to any of the 6 you just referred to. People still die in closed cockpit racing - closing the cockpit is not the ultimate solution.