And side mirrors with a power-fold feature for parking in tight situations like Parc Ferme. The drivers are not savages!
At the same time you can't pick out one or two to question and ignore all the others. Some of them we can't really know, some of them I haven't seen but Senna, Wheldon, Surtees, Bianchi and Wilson are reasonably solid that a halo would have made a differencel4mbch0ps wrote: ↑04 Jul 2019, 03:27"Ayrton Senna, Greg Moore, Tony Renna, Scott Brayton, Paul Dana, Gonzalo Rodriguez, Jeff Krosnoff, Dan Wheldon, Henry Surtees, Jules Bianchi and Justin Wilson were the victims."
Uhmm, not anywhere near all of these would have been prevented with a halo. Tony Renna's car disintegrated into the barriers, Paul Dana was struck broadside by another car at 170mph.
You can't justify a safety measure just by all of the deaths ever.
Ohh there is a point. One doesn’t like the HALO. One doesn’t like it to the point of quitting, and then quits. Like I did.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 12:47Not much point in having an opinion. It's gonna happen no matter what we think.
Seeing a driver die because he's driving at over 300km/h with his head exposed was acceptable a few years back, it isn't anymore. So as bad as they look, we're gonna have to get used to head protection devices.
Looks like the windshield is just that, a wind shield. The driver is completely inside the safety cell. Just like WEC protos for instance, where the the (top) bodywork is just aero, build on top of a halo like structure for safety (as in a roll cage).flynfrog wrote: ↑05 Jul 2019, 15:45Here are a few options that top fuel have been using. Got the picture last year I think.
https://i.imgur.com/MuFB4Kc.jpg
Senna was killed by the broken suspension attached to the wheel, which Halo would have blocked perfectly
http://www.ayrton-senna.com/s-files/picsf03.htmlThe report confirmed Senna's Senna's injuries injuries were compatible with a massive blow above the right eyebrow. Pathologist Carrado Cipolla, said that Senna died not from the impact itself, but from a "blow to the head from a blunt object," indicating a photograph apparently showing a section of the front suspension.