rscsr wrote: ↑01 Sep 2019, 21:32
Jolle wrote: ↑01 Sep 2019, 21:17
turbof1 wrote: ↑01 Sep 2019, 20:52
If we take the Anthoine Hubert accident as a case study, there are a few things to consider:
-Anthoine Hubert already crashed side to side into barriers before the car to car crash. Meaning the side impact structures already were very much compromised, and possible none existent at all. Impact structures are made for "one time use only", meaning they crumble on impact. They are certainly not made, nor can they be made, for several consecutive impacts.
-Juan Manuel Correa crashed very unluckily into Hubert, right at cockpit area. That means Hubert's side crash impact structure did not got significantly involved even if he still had those. If the dice fell differently and Correa crashed more into the front or back of Hubert's car, not only would that have avoided hitting the vital cockpit area, but the car would probably been hit way less into the CoG, which would have resulted alot of the energy of the crash being transferred into Hubert's car spinning around, dissipating it that way. When we are dealing with odds, Correa hitting Hubert's car the way he did were very low odds.
-Correa's front impact crash structure completely got demolished, to the point his legs were easily visible. Now the front impact structure is made for extreme high deacceleration crashes. It being completely ripped off and not able to mitigate all damage to Correa tells you something about the impact involved and why the side impact structures, even if not damaged, even if at the cockpit area instead of the sidepod area, would probably not have made a difference. You'd effectively need the front structures as the side structures to mitigate fatal risk.
It will take the FIA long years of research to get an adequate answer to that. It's a very difficult matter to resolve, especially because as my good friend jjn9128 said, you'd need forensic research on this. And a lot actually. These cases are extremely rare (and thank god they are), and will probably involve changing the completely silhouette of the car, maybe adding a lot of additional crumble structure in the cockpit area, or some structure to glans off a T-boning car. But as said, it's difficult. We are speaking of a 300 km/h car-sized projectile.
I agree totally, and the type of crash that was the second impact, the t-bone at high speed, is almost impossible to countermeasure. But, with common sense, as I mentioned in the other threat about this accident, this corner is one that is aways featured in the crash reel of most big accidents. The switchback with the small margin of error makes for big crashes. Luckily up till yesterday, always with just one car and we (as in racing) walked away lucky on more then just one occasion. Zanardi, Magnussen, Villeneuve, Zonta, Comas, and that's just F1 that spring to mind. If you look at a similar "balls to the wall" corner combination, Maggots and Beckets, there aren't any... at least not that spring to mind. More space to the wall, better view and no places to take the runoff as part of the track. The easy and possible best solution would be to reintroduce the 1994 chicane into that corner and take a close look at other corners that come multiple times to the top of the "worst crashes ever" lists.
I think that it doesn't take many adjustments to make this corner "safe". Just make the barriers follow a more direct path with no significant kinks in them. Therefore allowing a shallower angle and making cars less likely to be bounced onto the track again. And it would also would make rejoining safer.
There were three crashes.
1. Alesi, high speed, lost his rear wing and clipped off his rear wing. His impact was not hard enough to be caught in the fence and he bounced back on track and could continue.
2. Hubert's crash into the barrier. This barrier is in line with the track, where he crashed.
3. Correa crashes into Hubert, not on track but on the runoff. probably avoiding Alesi who is, limping on the racing line (without intent).
Crash 1, from Alesi, you can't do anything about. If someone doesn't crash 100%, you can't "catch" them into the barrier or something, certainly not at a part of the track where it's not that common to go off.
crash 2, first impact from Hubert: classic crash on top of the hill. Just no room for mistake there. One flinch and you're in the barrier.
crash 3, That Hubert's car bounced back from the impact occupying the same space where you take avoiding actions is the big mistake in the track. Hubert didn't bounce back on track!
There just isn't enough space there to have a (high speed) crash and avoid a slow driver on track. More space, what gives you more time, even could have prevented Hubert's first crash but certainly Correa's crash that was fatal for Hubert.