"Best"?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Feb 2018, 11:29One situation where the halo will be the best solution is head on in to tyre barriers. We've seen cases of the cars burying in to the barrier up to the driver's head. Kovalainen in Spain 2008 comes to mind. The halo will keep a clear space around the driver in such cases.
Let's turn it around. Please kindly tell us what loads the aero screen has been designed, engineered and tested to withstand. Show that these parameters exceed those required by the FIA as shown here:
I'd give up on it mate. These threads are the definition of a circular argument. People make claims based on their feelings and when corrected or pointed towards evidence to the contrary just repeat the same claims 2 pages down. There are comment sections on websites where people are more willing to see the rationale and engineering behind the halo than this technical forum.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Feb 2018, 14:02Let's turn it around. Please kindly tell us what loads the aero screen has been designed, engineered and tested to withstand. Show that these parameters exceed those required by the FIA as shown here:
https://www.formula1.com/content/fom-we ... 483104.jpg
Or, lets not, "turn it around".
THE FIA "SHIELD", RED BULL "AEROSCREEN" AND INDY "DEFLECTOR" ARE DIFFERENT CONCEPTS!!!NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 Feb 2018, 14:39I guess if we have no figures yet on the aero screen, we cant say the Halo is the best as we dont know yet. for all we know (just for arguments sake) The Aero screen can hold the weight of 2 London Busses
I know that surely wont be the case, so comparing the 2 is a little premature at this stage. All we can compare is what it looks like from outside the car, and what it would look like as a driver. And after seeing the Scott Dixon run on an oval at night, I feel its 2.0 to the Aero Screen on those 2 points.
The whole "Sickness" thing Vettel was on about with the Red Bull screen was rubbish IMO. I guess he never drives a road car then ? or would never be able to do LeMans. I reckon it was just a reason to stop Red Bull getting their idea in, and i can see why Ferrari/Vettel wouldn't want that. If anyone gained most with the Red Bull Screen, it would be Red Bull themselves.
The halo was originally designed and tested to stop a 20kg wheel/tyre at 225km/h. The load tests specified by the FIA include a 46kN load from straight on. That's just over 4.6 tonnes force for those using old money. It's also about the lateral force that the main roll hoop is required to withstand. The last time a roll hoop failed was in Bianchi's crash and that was an outlier in terms of F1 accidents. So we can say that in all normal F1 accidents, including Alonso's terrifying flying roll last year, the roll hoop has survived. It's entirely reasonable to look at the halo and say it will survive similar accidents. Submarining in to the tyre barrier is a large load but not 46kN because, luckily, the nose and the tyres themselves absorb a lot of energy.J.A.W. wrote: ↑13 Feb 2018, 14:58Or, lets not, "turn it around".
& you simply answer the polite query, as best you can - for the specific instance - per your assertion.
Consider that road death probabilities are in the order of 0.01% and this is considered too high. Then there's the fact that debris strikes are one of the the primary causes of injury/death in open wheel racing in the last decade.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 Feb 2018, 19:46Indeed. I guess we will find out at some point. Its also worth finding out how many of the 80 wheels have come unattached in the last 5 years . Weve had about 500 sessions in the last 5 years, and 80 wheels in each session so thats about 40,000 wheels in 5 years. How many of those have come unattached?
At a guess I'd say less than 0.1%, and then that 0.1% need to bounch across the track which is at a guess a 1 in 5 chance so now its 0.02% then we need another car to be on the part of track which the wheel is bouncing ect ect ect which brings me back to the question..... why are we even doing this?