Guys, thank you for being so kind with this question. I am still waiting for the equations to pop-up... and you know engineers: we prefer numbers to opinions.
Anyway, let me address a couple of points about road design: this, I know.
Only two issues, because I am going to give myself ample room, throwing away my own advice and filling myself with opinions. If you are in a hurry, please skip this post. Besides, this is a little technical.
First
A road designer has few legal constraints. We have a couple of codes, but more freedom of what some of you think.
Example one: compliance with AASHTO "Green book", bible of road geometric design in America, is voluntary, not compulsory.
Even AASHTO (something like "FIA for roads in USA") is just a bunch of guys "trying to spread the word", not a legislating body. The sad truth is that road designers are not personally responsible for their errors (sometimes atrocities), because suits go against the agency, not the person. Besides, show me an accident simulator that works and can pinpoint the responsible and I will make you rich.
Example two: Who was blamed and taken to court in 1997 for Ayrton Senna's death? Frank Williams and Adrian Newey. Did anybody think about the responsibility of the designer who draw a happy day an awfully short distance between the curve and the barrier, maybe just for the sake of the spectators? I surely did.
Imagine how medical doctors would behave if all their mistakes burdened only the hospital. It seems to me that circuit design border this lack of accountability. The fans are not worried about it. You do not compete with anybody; any design is good as long as you show that you are "stressing the car". Pilots complain frequently, the older the louder, but... this is business.
And why pilots complain? My theory: if you wish, I can prove to you that there is no way to compute a optimum path through three consecutive curves. You can do it for one curve. You can use a computer to resolve TWO curves by brute force. But imagine: TAKING THREE CURVES IS AN ART, IT CAN NOT BE SOLVED BY A COMPUTER (please, if you know how to solve this problem, I am your humble slave).
How many of you live in a world where you can stress so much the human imagination? There you have a problem that cannot be resolved mechanically. It is really a problem of inspiration. Well, where are the circuits with this idea in mind? Some of you mention (interesting point) that "old" circuits are not anymore with us. But, in particular, why did Nurburgring died? BECAUSE IT COULD NOT BE LEARNT. It was too long. You had to do it by heart. Now I am sickened by the articles named "a lap with.... through the circuit of ....”. The guys give you the speed with 1 kph precision for every curve. Try to do this at the "old" Nurburgring. But now... is business, the managers tell you.
So then, second point:
Well, let’s think about the business of road design as opposed to car design.
I suppose, for the tone of the answers, that you agree that F-1, besides being fun, is for intelligent people. Pilots are not only brave (Hunt) or skilled (Alesi): they are intelligent (Nuvolari), more than you and me (at least than me). Mechanical engineers, subject of intense competition, to hundredths of a second, to tenths of one percent of total horsepower, are smart the way engineers can be smart (Newey)
I prefer to remain silent about team managers intelligence... (Stoddard)
I am sure the world can use rapidly their intelligence and the pile of money they are throwing at the sport (by the way, it is YOUR money). I tell you: the process between a new road design technique and its implementation is very brief. We are talking of a mature industry, almost (or over) 100 years old. Its only the sheer size and cost of the infrastructure already built what delays general implementation of new ideas (it is the same, I suspect, for F-1 circuits, as some of you pointed). The reason is simple: road designers are few and they know each other, almost always less than 1,000 of them in one particular country, a few hundred really active for many, many years, maybe only tens of them practicing in a small country. Now, only one (it seems) active in F-1.
Another thing I ponder is that all accident specialists I know (two of them I held in high esteem: the now retired head of the Safety Department in Spain's road agency and an executive director, also retired, of USA's National Transportation Safety Board) and almost every article I’ve read in Transportation Research Board's magazine think of the infrastructure as the main cause of accidents.
Think about this for a moment. Only changing the road can you abate the rate of deaths. There are thousands and thousands of accidents around you every year. This is worst than whatever human loss you can think about, second only to coronary as cause of death. I am talking about your life: this is what is at risk. It could seem funny so much effort put into translation to passenger cars of racing cars safety features if what F-1 circuit designers learn is not put to some use. And I am sure they make dynamic (in movement) analysis, not static (or at rest: I am stressing this point because somebody understood "statistical analysis", which is a completely different thing).
Well, I suppose this is more than enough. Thanks for your patience, if you are still reading this. As a newbie, I am going to ask for forgiveness, but I am decided (if the forum allows it) to try to start a series of posts devoted to the "Engineering of car racing", humbly following the master's lead (Brian Beckman's "Physics of racing"), and, of course, the word of God (as written in Ayrton Senna's "Principles of race driving").
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