.... but has certainly proved its worth. Otherwise it wouldn't have
been just a wheel we would have seen bouncing across the track :-O
It doesn't seem to have raised objections from drivers relating to visibility distractions.
And a purely cosmetic basis it looks sleek and elegant in comparison
with the silly little windscreens of the Indy-cars.
.... but has certainly proved its worth. Otherwise it wouldn't have
been just a wheel we would have seen bouncing across the track :-O
It doesn't seem to have raised objections from drivers relating to visibility distractions.
And a purely cosmetic basis it looks sleek and elegant in comparison
with the silly little windscreens of the Indy-cars.
.... but has certainly proved its worth. Otherwise it wouldn't haveYep, undoubtedly added to his safety today and likely saved his life.
been just a wheel we would have seen bouncing across the track :-O
It doesn't seem to have raised objections from drivers relating to visibility distractions.
And a purely cosmetic basis it looks sleek and elegant in comparison
with the silly little windscreens of the Indy-cars.
geoff
On Monday, 30 November 2020 at 00:49:14 UTC, geoff wrote:
.... but has certainly proved its worth. Otherwise it wouldn't haveYep, undoubtedly added to his safety today and likely saved his life.
been just a wheel we would have seen bouncing across the track :-O
It doesn't seem to have raised objections from drivers relating to
visibility distractions.
And a purely cosmetic basis it looks sleek and elegant in comparison
with the silly little windscreens of the Indy-cars.
geoff
Though having armco that you can't spear a car through the middle of
would have helped too.
I don't even notice the halo as an aesthetic thing now, it's just part of
the way an F1 car looks.
On 30/11/2020 4:52 pm, larkim wrote:Maybe, though maybe he could / should have been deflected too.
On Monday, 30 November 2020 at 00:49:14 UTC, geoff wrote:
.... but has certainly proved its worth. Otherwise it wouldn't haveYep, undoubtedly added to his safety today and likely saved his life.
been just a wheel we would have seen bouncing across the track :-O
It doesn't seem to have raised objections from drivers relating to
visibility distractions.
And a purely cosmetic basis it looks sleek and elegant in comparison
with the silly little windscreens of the Indy-cars.
geoff
Though having armco that you can't spear a car through the middle of
would have helped too.
I don't even notice the halo as an aesthetic thing now, it's just part of the way an F1 car looks.
If he hadn't penetrated it, the impact would have been even greater - apparently 53G as it was. How much can a body take !!!
geoff
On Monday, 30 November 2020 at 09:38:28 UTC, geoff wrote:
On 30/11/2020 4:52 pm, larkim wrote:
On Monday, 30 November 2020 at 00:49:14 UTC, geoff wrote:If he hadn't penetrated it, the impact would have been even greater -
.... but has certainly proved its worth. Otherwise it wouldn't haveYep, undoubtedly added to his safety today and likely saved his life.
been just a wheel we would have seen bouncing across the track :-O
It doesn't seem to have raised objections from drivers relating to
visibility distractions.
And a purely cosmetic basis it looks sleek and elegant in comparison
with the silly little windscreens of the Indy-cars.
geoff
Though having armco that you can't spear a car through the middle of
would have helped too.
I don't even notice the halo as an aesthetic thing now, it's just part of >>> the way an F1 car looks.
apparently 53G as it was. How much can a body take !!!
Maybe, though maybe he could / should have been deflected too.
The angle was more direct than usual, but it still looked like it could have had the potential to bounce back onto the circuit; it looked to me (and I
am no forensic accident investigator!) like the front pierced the armco
with the front right towards the barrier, then it wedged in and pivotted around, shedding the rear, so Grosjean ended up facing backwards in
relation to the track. Or maybe as it pivoted, the rear whacked the armco and that's what sheared it off.
Generally armco is intended to flex and return the car to the track isn't
it, as it would on the middle of a motorway?
On 1/12/2020 3:27 am, larkim wrote:<snipped>
Generally armco is intended to flex and return the car to the track isn't
it, as it would on the middle of a motorway?
The thing is the height of F1 cars noses keeps changing. Unfortunately with this era of car the
nose pierced between two armco strips and opened them up. That wouldn't have happened with a side
impact or with a car that had a larger frontal area.
The thing is the height of F1 cars noses keeps changing. Unfortunately with this era of car theThis is an interesting point. I wonder when the current Armco was sourced for BIC and was it specific to the nose designs of that period. It's probably a rabbit hole but an interesting "unintended consequences" exercise around the changes that are made to the cars to address a specific safety concern.
nose pierced between two armco strips and opened them up. That wouldn't have happened with a side
impact or with a car that had a larger frontal area.
--
Shaun.
On Monday, November 30, 2020 at 6:04:37 PM UTC-6, ~misfit~ wrote:
<snip>
The thing is the height of F1 cars noses keeps changing. Unfortunately with this era of car the
nose pierced between two armco strips and opened them up. That wouldn't have happened with a side
impact or with a car that had a larger frontal area.
--
Shaun.
This is an interesting point. I wonder when the current Armco was sourced for BIC and was it specific to the nose designs of that period. It's probably a rabbit hole but an interesting "unintended consequences" exercise around the changes that are made to the cars to address a specific safety concern.
As I recall the noses were dropped around 2012 and again in 2014 but the specific details except me. I do know that BIC was opened for F1 in 2004. How often do they change the Armco?
FWIW
DLM
On Monday, 30 November 2020 at 09:38:28 UTC, geoff wrote:
On 30/11/2020 4:52 pm, larkim wrote:Maybe, though maybe he could / should have been deflected too.
On Monday, 30 November 2020 at 00:49:14 UTC, geoff wrote:If he hadn't penetrated it, the impact would have been even greater -
.... but has certainly proved its worth. Otherwise it wouldn't haveYep, undoubtedly added to his safety today and likely saved his life.
been just a wheel we would have seen bouncing across the track :-O
It doesn't seem to have raised objections from drivers relating to
visibility distractions.
And a purely cosmetic basis it looks sleek and elegant in comparison
with the silly little windscreens of the Indy-cars.
geoff
Though having armco that you can't spear a car through the middle of
would have helped too.
I don't even notice the halo as an aesthetic thing now, it's just part of >>> the way an F1 car looks.
apparently 53G as it was. How much can a body take !!!
geoff
The angle was more direct than usual, but it still looked like it could have had the potential to bounce back onto the circuit; it looked to me (and I
am no forensic accident investigator!) like the front pierced the armco
with the front right towards the barrier, then it wedged in and pivotted around, shedding the rear, so Grosjean ended up facing backwards in
relation to the track. Or maybe as it pivoted, the rear whacked the armco and that's what sheared it off.
Generally armco is intended to flex and return the car to the track isn't
it, as it would on the middle of a motorway?
On 01/12/2020 04:02, D Munz wrote:
On Monday, November 30, 2020 at 6:04:37 PM UTC-6, ~misfit~ wrote:
<snip>
The thing is the height of F1 cars noses keeps changing.
Unfortunately with this era of car the
nose pierced between two armco strips and opened them up. That
wouldn't have happened with a side
impact or with a car that had a larger frontal area.
--
Shaun.
This is an interesting point. I wonder when the current Armco was
sourced for BIC and was it specific to the nose designs of that
period. It's probably a rabbit hole but an interesting "unintended
consequences" exercise around the changes that are made to the cars to
address a specific safety concern.
As I recall the noses were dropped around 2012 and again in 2014 but
the specific details except me. I do know that BIC was opened for F1
in 2004. How often do they change the Armco?
FWIW
DLM
The details will be in the Technical Regs., but they are not that easy
to decipher. That said, the measurements all relate to the reference
plane, which, I think, is the flat bottom without the plank.
GRO's car was scraping the ground after the collision with KVY, there
were 3 lines leading to the impact point, two from the tyres and a
central line from the plank. So, the nose would have been closer to
the ground than it's normal racing height.
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