izzy wrote: ↑02 Sep 2019, 22:02
There are two crumple zones to contribute tho - one in the nose of the striking car and one in the side of the struck car. These could add up to 1m or more, if the sport got determined about it.
Currently the side of the car doesn't give much protection in a T-bone incident unless the impacting car's nose hits one of the lateral crash structures. If this doesn't happen, the impact is absorbed by the impacting car's front impact structure (the nose cone), with the impacted car's chassis having to rely on the anti-penetration panel to keep the tub intact. All of the deceleration is done by the impacting car's nose, in effect. The anti-penetration panel is having to take a lot of load without splitting and this is probably the weak point in the system. The F2 cars pass the same crash tests as F1 cars do so we can be confident that if that accident had involved two F1 cars, we would be mourning an F1 driver today.
To add additional energy absorption in to the cars, we'd need to make the noses longer and / or add some panels on the side of the tub. I would suggest that longer noses would be easy if perhaps aesthetically unwelcome to many. Side panels would be easy to add but would change the aero designs of the car quite a bit - in effect the sidepods would be moved outwards and the gap between the sidepods and the turning vanes would disappear.
How well the side panels would work is somewhat dependent on the shape of the impacting nose cone, along with the stiffness of the side panel's outer skin. A stiff panel with a crushable core behind would help to prevent a simple penetration and would maximise the area over which the impact load was absorbed.
It's worth noting that the impacting car's nose was gone after the accident. Either it was totally crushed or it was ripped off by a lateral load. In either case, it left the impacting car driver's feet exposed to injury. I'm reminded of Kubica's crash in Canada in 2007 where the nose hit a concrete wall at a 45 degree angle (approximately), having glanced off an earlier wall impact that sheared off the front right suspension, and was totally destroyed. The concrete wall panel that he hit was moved backwards by the impact too, such was the energy involved. This would have been a similar speed to the Spa incident. Indeed, the whole accident is remarkably similar, except the wall was another car at Spa. It's no surprise that the F2 car was unable to protect the driver in such an impact. I'm not sure an open wheeled single seater ever could in such a circumstance.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.