Motor Sport
-
that would seem reasonable to me. and wtf was maldonado doing at the start - another clown.
spa-francorchamps still the greatest circuit of them all though. well done belgium…
-
LOL…
-
Grosjean should thank his lucky stars that fuck up didn't end up killing Alonso. I can't imagine what possessed him to just dive into Hamilton's car like that. A real testament to the safety of these cars now. Knocked two WC's and title contenders out of the points for this race, changed the championship up a bit. Spa is always an exciting time for better or worse.
Just glad everyone got away breathing and upright.
-
Yeah I agree.. I was just waiting for flames to emerge from each corner of Sauber! I also think that Maldonado's jumped start helped to add to the confusion from the get go.
All of that aside, Grosjean is damn lucky Alonso is still walking. Bonehead move of the season, and that's saying something..
Head protection worries me a bit. I can't see how they can achieve something useful without it turning into closed cockpits. What then, enclosed wheel arches?
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
-
My thoughts exactly. Is the logical conclusion sports cars?
Supposedly they're working on a 'cage' system that minimizes the amount that the driver's view is blocked. I reckon the other big challenge is how do you get the driver out in event of a rollover/fire?
Asked and answered the big question right there. A rolled over car with a closed cockpit thats bursting into flames. Thats the nightmare situation trying to be avoided.
I don't believe a close cockpit and closed wheel arches are able to go away and the sport still remain 'Formula 1'. I think a higher shelf around the drivers head but still remaining open would be a 'best possible' solution.
-
Senna got impaled on his steering column, didn't he? Safety has gotten dramatically better since that tragedy.
-
Actually, a cage might have helped - Senna's helmet was pierced by a right front suspension piece that came back up into the cockpit.
But, I'm with you, Giles. I haven't got used to the closed cockpits they have now, let alone the coming changes. Formula One is supposed to be dangerous. While I don't miss gravel traps, per se, I am a bit tired of drivers being able to make monumental mistakes and get away with it.
-
I agree with Giles here.. F1 is the only 4 wheel motorsport I watch religiously, and it the open air design were to go away, then i probably will too.
Rear bumper is interesting. The reason Grosjean was launched over Alonso was (as far as i can see) due to the fact that Lewis was attached to the rear of grosjean. Lewis had no steering but his rear wheels still driving the Lotus up and over the Ferrari. Perhaps if Lewis had hit a Lotus bumper the whole thing would have been a lot less severe? Who knows.
Having said all that, death is extremely rare in the highest form of motorsport we have. Not bad if you ask me.
-
Lewis had no steering but his rear wheels still driving the Lotus up and over the Ferrari. Perhaps if Lewis had hit a Lotus bumper the whole thing would have been a lot less severe? Who knows
Lewis wouldn't have hit the back of the Lotus at all. Grosjean side-swiped the McLaren, which then swung the Lotus in front of the McLaren pushing it over the front of the Ferrari which was banking into the corner.
Lane discipline and respect for other drivers is far more important than added safety features. This was caused by human error not mechanical failure. In short: the driver fucked up.
I agree with all of you: open wheel and open cockpit define Formula 1.
-
Preview of the 2013 F1 race in NJ, including the US national anthem "played" using an F1 engine at the start…
-
Love the little inbuilt jacks, so they can get the car of it's wheels super quick…
A few tyres - 14 used over the weekend at USD600 a pop - it all starts to mount up
This is all I am allowed to drive
Refuelling the manual way - can still dump about 50 litres in 3 secs
Ben straps Alex in