Shrieker wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 14:19
1) No naked barriers. Please, we're in 2020.
At least triple tire layer everywhere, no ifs or buts.
I agree, i was shocked with this incident on a car getting through. that needs to be resolved.
whether tire barriers are the correct decision i'm not sure of, but a naked barrier where you can go through, is not done.
additionally, i think one of the biggest problems here was that the barrier was angled too much facing against the track instead of 'alongside' the direction of the track (which is partially due to the need for escape routes). as such, you're face-on hitting a wall instead of 'colliding' sideways into a wall. it was also too close to the track in the end.
it may be a 'freak' accident, but by now, that's really all that happens and freak accidents are the 'new normal' in f1.
2) Automated spotter. In the shape of both audial and visual warning (maybe in the form of a red light on the mirrors). There are hairy situations like triple wide where a driver just would not be able to tell. If a sim like iracing can do it extremely well, then there can be just no excuses. We have the tech and the money to do it, it's not a technical challenge at all at this point. It can be designed in a 'smart' way too, where it's not intrusive, but provide the driver with insight regarding approach speed to act as a collision warning. Think a bit like heat seeking tone that climbs up gradually for gradual closing speeds, and goes from 0 to 100 in a millisecond when the closing speed is fast.
I don't really understand what you are saying here. Like some warning that there is an object ahead that is moving far too slow compared to normal/delta speed? if that, then it might be interesting, perhaps if there is a difference of 20 or 30 kph compared to normal delta, this could be a thing. it would be a pre-emptive yellow flag of sorts. virtual yellow flag?
3) Extend the sidepods and beef up the side impact structures . Make the monocoque beefier overall too, the added weight can be subtracted from elsewhere on the car. Make the crash tests even more stringent. The nosecones need a rething as well. They're too 'spear-like' at their current form.
I do believe that some bigger protection alongside the narrow 'cockpit' might marginally improve safety in the case of a side impact. however, i think grosjean's crash and how intact the 'safety cell' remained is proof that it's safe enough, so i wouldn't agree here.
4) On track safety procedures must be reviewed. We've had marshalls on the track in a SC period, truck+marshalls on the side of the track in the wet on a live session, and then marshalls on the track again at full racing speeds respectively. This is unacceptable. F1 has clearly taken a step back at the post Charlie era, and they must get their act together asap.
yeah, marshalls running across the track was retarded.
also, one thing to concider: despite having their dumb comments too, SkyF1 did mention that neither the Medical car staff nor the marshalls could come close enoguh to Grosjean to help him due to the intensity of the heat of the fire due to the lack of face protection.
For example, F1 drivers, and certain pit crew, are wearing not only fire balaclava's, but also fully enclosed helmets.
Perhaps it's a thing to concider to have atleast 1 marshall at any given area of the track in a fully fireproof suit, so that even a fire wouldn't prevent them to reach a driver in peril. If they would make a suit that even includes perhaps cooling facilities, then in the worst case, this marshall could run into the fire to help a driver escape and be able to reach physical contact distance.
something i noticed too is that the marshall that immediately after the fire started, running across the track, was aided by the medical car personel to release the safety pin of the fire extinguisher before he could use it.
Whether he was untrained, or under stress, i don't know, but even though minimal, it is time lost that could make things worse. It's one thing to operate a fire extinguisher in jeans and hands free, it's another thing whilst wearing heat-resistant working gloves in a heavy suit. Perhaps the FIA needs to look into the fire extinguishers too and 'simply' add bigger rings that are easier to remove when needed, OR, at the start of a race, remove the safety pins alltogether so that they're immediately able to be used.
5) Indycar style panels in front of the rear wheels to prevent low/mid speed flips. Hulkenberg's and Stroll's flips were completely preventable and nonsensical in this day and age.
please no. open wheeler is open wheeler. Stroll's flip was due to Kvyat making a retarded entry into a corner which he could never have made, there was a car there, he acted like there wasn't. If this was a street circuit he could not have made that corner anyway like he did so he had to brake. The problem was: he didn't brake. No matter what you do, the problem there was he didn't brake. Apart from that, there was no issue with Stroll at all.
6) Advanced automated warning in limited visibility conditions: If there's a crash splattering debris all over the track (or a car sitting in whatever orientation on the track itself), a signal is instantly dispatched to the other cars either thru a central system, or a decentralized manner (think car to car, or car to beacon to car transmission), or both to have them slow down immediately.
unneccesary, if there's an accident/contact, your engineer can inform you 'debris ahead' as they're already doing btw. so this can be taken off the list.
7) I don't know what can prevent a Massa-like event, sans a windscreen. You can never protect against all eventualities though, no matter how many precautions you take.
The Halo helps a lot in that already, and the improved helmets also help. I don't really see much need right now, except indeed a windscreen could fix but you're really losing the soul of F1. also, if you implement a windscreen, grosjean could not have gotten out. so no, that's not an option.
*I had opened a separate thread for #2 a few years ago, and the idea was generally disliked for some reason.
i don't get either why for some reason you need to nag about something from a few years ago.