WhiteBlue wrote:
Until someone refutes the points I have brought up I will not even entertain questions that do not address the main issue
You haven't brought up any points. You've stated what you think would be necessary, with no particular reasoning behind it, thus my questions. If you don't feel like answering them that's fine, it's what i had expected as you have very little data about the accident beyond having seen a video.
You don't know at what speed that tyre came back into the track, you don't know how it came loose, you don't know how much energy the barrier absorbed.
In a freak accident like that one, slowing the car down, having bigger run offs, barriers that absorb more energy, might have meant the tyre would have simply hit someone else that was behind Mr. Surtees. In fact, all other things constant, imagine that run off would have been 1m shorter, then the tyre would have just missed him. Or maybe not, you just don't know.
WhiteBlue wrote:Bigger run offs as in class one circuits would have prevented debris to come back on track.
Yet evidence seen by anyone who watches F1 says the opposite, a tyre can travel very far, it may be
well behavedor not as this unfortunate accident proved. Chk the video from Modbaran,
WhiteBlue wrote:I stay convinced that state of the art track safety would have greatly reduced the chance of a freak collision between wheel and driver helmet.
My great grandma remained convinced turtle shells could fall from the skies in her later years and she took that to her grave, but that didn't mean it could actually happen...
Alejandro L.