radosav wrote: ↑30 Jun 2018, 10:27
browney wrote: ↑30 Jun 2018, 10:23
radosav wrote: ↑30 Jun 2018, 10:06
So Charlie Whitting said that teams should make wings stiffer.
Is this seroius answer to very seroius question?
Lots of teams suffered due to yellow kerbs,for some of drivers one corner off track could mean end of race. While during French GP you could go where ever you want off track, without any damage.
I wasn't sure if you are for or against the curbs?
I think it is good that there are curbs like that to make sure the best drivers in the world actually stay on the track. I have no problem with running off the track (Ie. Making a sporting mistake) ruining a driver's race, just like it does at a street circuit. If it is safe enough, I'd like all circuits to have curbs like that.
I also think that circuits like Paul Ricard, conversely make the sport worse because it reduces the challenge of driving the track.
It goes without saying that the circuits need to be safe (this is the highest priority) but there should be a sporting consequence for going off the track.
It is also another challenge for the stress engineers to design for that load case. After all, we push aero engineers for the best concepts.
I am against so large kerbs. If driver goes off track he should only lose time , like on most tracks, not parts of car like here.
Problem is in Austria - especially the last 2 turns, but also turn 1 and 3 - going wide is an advantage. It allows them to overspeed the apex and carry the speed through to exit - so there has to be a strong deterrent to keep them on the black stuff. It's a balance of risk to reward for them, risk the speed but get it wrong and there's a potential for retirement, which is what all the drivers have been asking for when they say the circuits are too sanitized, e.g. Paul Ricard, if you watch the Blancpain at Paul Ricard all the drivers run 1-2m off the track on exit of Signes.
It's another annoying thing about the modern world, give 'em what they want and they moan that's not quite what they meant. It's why we have the current crap aero rules and tyres.