I understand that. But that is not my point. I am not inside the cockpit looking outward.Jolle wrote: ↑09 Dec 2017, 20:07Actually, a two pillar system blocks the drivers view at certain points, while a center pillar never does that. At first it doesn't seems to make sense.Edax wrote: ↑09 Dec 2017, 01:44I was thinking along the same lines. The thing which makes the Halo look utterly stupid is the central column. It is like placing a big column smack in the middle of the stage of the theater and telling people it is no problem since you can see 99% of the play around the pillar.
( That’s aside the notion that the thing looks like it is modelled after a cheap G-string, which you don’t want to wear over your head in public)
Two A-pillars would be a much better solution IMHO. I can imagine something where you have two thinner pillars with a polycarbonate screen in-between them. Since it soes not have to be so curved it does not distort vision. Even better you can have it double as a HUD to give it some kind of functional legitimacy.
Just imagine this with the top part of the halo mounted over the top. Aero would probably be bad but at least it would look cool.
http://falcon4.wdfiles.com/local--files ... ud/hud.jpg
First, front view is not very important to racing drivers. they want a good view of the apexes and the braking points off track. There is already a lot of "things" on the centreline of the tub, like a camera, pilot tubes, etc. In the early nineties the drivers sometimes hardly could see over the tub!
Your vision is blocked when both eyes are obstructed. when you look to the side, your nose blocks a big part of your view. You won't notice this (unless you close your other eye), because your brain blocks it out. If you have a pilar to the side, there are times when your "good" eye is obstructed by the pilar and your other eye is blocked by your nose. With a front pillar, an object is never blocked by the pilar or whatever for both eyes, your brain makes it into a whole picture.
Don't get fooled by all the pictures or racing games with a halo on in, that's not how your brain will see it. if you want to try it, watch tv with a flat hand or a thin stik in view a 40 cm in front of your face. You will see the whole TV screen.
I am a spectator, and from my television screen or trackside position, it is pretty hard not to look at that monstrosity. So if the drivers need to exchange a bit of visibility for my viewing pleasure, so be it.
Besides how bad can it be? It is not like airplanes are crashing left and right because their view is obstructed by the HUD frame. If it is good enough to guide an F16 through the mach loop, or lower a hornet on an aircraft carrier, it should probably suffice for getting a car around the track.