Some have been arguing that Sainz should have braked or whatever, but IMO, what most fail to realize is that once you come over those sausage-kerbs, or whatever they call them, it unsettles the car and depending on the trajectory, it's not that easy to simply brake, change your trajectory and make that narrow entry without hitting the bollards.SiLo wrote: ↑28 Sep 2020, 14:54So I want someone to explain to me if I am mad to think this - but should Sainz have also got some kind of reprimand or penalty for his reckless driving that led to his accident? He has purposefully gone full speed trying not to lose time through the bollards, had a big accident and then come back across the track endangering other peoples lives in the process?
To some extend, you are a by-passenger until the car stables out and you regain control.
As an example; Braking hard changes the load on the front tires, makes the rear light and if you at the same time attempt to corner, you run the risk of losing the rear. This is all happening off track, where grip is decreased too.
I'm not saying it's impossible - evidently, most drivers who completely left the track there had a much better angle to the bollards and safely managed to navigate them to enter the track at the designated area. To those that only just came over that kerb (like Sainz, Grosjean and Riccardo, who didn't even attempt to make the bollards and thus received a penalty), the angle was perhaps too shallow and the danger quite high to either hit the bollards or the wall.
I think the fact that we've had 2 incidents all in the same spot (Sainz, Grosjean) underlines that perhaps the placement of those bollards wasn't that great.