gridwalker wrote:
If anyone cares to ask me, the fuel is much safer when contained in a bullet-proof kevlar sack coated in carbon fibre than it ever will be whilst being pumped through a hose under high pressure.
Additionally, the fuel contained in the tank (the afforementioned kevlar sack) is only a primary risk to the driver, whilst the fuel being pumped is a danger to the whole pit crew. Refuelling amplifies the danger by an order of magnitude by exposing a much larger number of people to the risk, whilst increasing the chance of leakage and vapourisation.
Ergo, refuelling is the least safe option.
I agree when you just compare no refuelling against refuelling it’s more dangerous to refuel a car but me must keep the whole environment in mind we are talking about here.
We are talking about motorsport here.
-They are driving ridiculous fast in open wheeled, open cockpit cars on dangerous tracks like Monaco, Valencia, Singapore, Melbourne, Spa, South Korea…
Do you think those tracks are safe? They are not and never can be. A crash on the wrong spot can end very bad.
-Tyres are not covered and the cars have many sharp edges. Even a very soft touch can destroy the tyres. As if this would not be enough its possible that one car gets lifted of when two tyres touch. Causing an unpredictable danger as nobody can know how such a car will fly trough the air and where it will come down.
-Cockpits are open. The only protection against parts or complete cars a driver has is his helmet. It’s one of the most dangerous aspects of the sport. Alone this year there have been a couple of very close situations. It’s a pure matter of luck that so few serious incidents have happened so far. Its absolutely unpredictable what and how something can happen. Just think of Surtees and Massa.
-They are racing against each other this means they can always touch and one car can leave the track in an unpredictable way. They are even driving during rain conditions, with reduced grip and many times without any free view.
So now let’s look on refuelling again.
Ok you are handling a burnable fluid so things can happen but you know what you are doing and the possible dangerous cases are all known and predictable. So what are those cases?
1. The driver can launch to early ripping of the fuel rig or to run over the mechanics.
If the fuel rig gets ripped of some build in valves get closed so only very little fuel gets spilled. Anyway its simple to prevent this when the driver just doesn’t go to early.
Mechanics can still get run over because there are still tyre changes. In fact this problem got worse because:
A. The stop times got very short and limited by the tire change.
B. Stop times became much more important because a lost position in pit can never be regained on track so the drivers are more nervous now.
2. There can be an issue with the fuel rig and some fuel can get spilled.
It is rare to happen and usually it’s just very little fuel (due to build in safety valves) that gets spilled and is extinguished in seconds especially because you expect it to happen and have extinguishers ready at hand. Also the mechanics and drivers are wearing fire resistant clothes.
To sum it up there are very few cases that can happen, everybody knows them and everybody is trained how to react on them. The actual danger is therefore predictable. Its comparable to using a welding gear.
If you compare it to all the other dangers that exist in the sport, which can be fatal and are absolutely unpredictable it’s OK to say refuelling is not dangerous.
It is even ridiculous to complain about the danger of refuelling and ignoring all the other real dangers.