Just_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Nov 2020, 18:25
Mogster wrote: ↑29 Nov 2020, 18:22
El Scorchio wrote: ↑29 Nov 2020, 18:02
Sky said there was talk it was the fuel feeder or collection pipe (or similar) that got punctured or severed. They thought if it was the whole tank it would have been an even bigger fireball.
Surely the fire was too big for it to have been caused by a couple of pints of fuel. The Sky team said someone at the scene reported the whole area being covered in petrol, there were pools of it on the ground.
100kg of petrol wouldn't be put out by a couple of hand held fire extinguishers. It would need a full fire appliance to deal with that much fuel. Trust me, they'#d use every hand held extinguisher on the track to put out 100kgs of fuel.
2 litres of petrol (nearly half a gallon) is a lot of fuel.
Much of the fluid on the floor will have been coolant.
though i don't fully agree to how hand held fire extinguishers couldn't 'end' a good load of fuel,
it depends whether all the fuel has been 'ignited' and part of the burning process. Basically though
you are absolutely right.
As goes for the 2 litres of petrol too, especially concidering the fuel F1 cars use is not the same as what
you get from your regular fueling station, and probably is more flammable.
imagine taking your 2 litre bottle of cola, filling it up with gasoline, leave the top off, have a firestone next to it and throwing it with excessive speed into a parked convertible. that'll be a good burn.
anyway, can't believe how lucky and fortunate grosjean was.
Not only could he have been hit by debris in an unhappy fashion just moments before the collision,
but to get veered so fast into that barrier and come out of it alive is just a miracle.
the halo guaranteed saved his life, if there was no halo, he would have gotten stuck right in the middle of that barrier, unable to escape and as such trapped into a ball of fire and flames, despite getting extinguished pretty swiftly (i'm not saying perfect but still swift), that might have been enough to atleast have lauda effects.
Not just that, but the metal barrier could much more likely have cut into him when not protected by the halo,
causing even more worrysome and gruesome injury.
The halo most certainly has saved his life.
I'm still baffled by the whole incident, that includes that he actually literally went through the barriers.
I get cold still watching that wrangled remains of the monocoque and how he got out alive.
And yes, if he got in just a few more degrees downward it could have been so much worse, making it far more difficult perhaps even impossible to escape the cockpit, caught in a blazing ball of fire.
or, worse, if the impact/crash would have injured his feet or legs in such fashion that he could not use his legs to climb out of the car.
you could see just how hot that inferno was by the medical car driver that tried to get to grosjean as fast as he could but was 'shielded' by the heat of the fire, where Grosjean was in the complete middle of.
Baffled he got out with only 'minor' burns to his hands and feet.
Artery injury due to extreme peak G decelleration, bruised or broken ribs, bruised, broken or even cut feet or legs,
broken fingers, hands, wrists or arms, deep cuts by the fence metal, pierced or crushed helmet, severe burns to the face, neck, body. broken neck or spine, the severity of the impact could easily have caused any of these injuries.
curious who will race in his place, i have trouble believing he is going to participate in the 2nd Bahrain GP.