Misconception there!! Roland Ratzenberger damaged the wing running over the kerb the lap before, did not pit for a new wing and crashed when the wing detached got under the wheel.richard_leeds wrote:Roland's death was caused by his front wing breaking off. Nick Wirth was designer, owner and team principal for that team. It was unnerving that there was another front wing failure when Wirth returned as team principal in 2010 for Virgin.
Ratzenberger was killed during qualifying for the San Marino Grand Prix at the Imola circuit on Saturday 30 April 1994. He went off-track on the previous lap, damaging his front wing, but rather than come into the pits he continued since he was competing for the final grid spot.[3] The high speed on the back straight, and therefore high wind pressure, finally broke the wing off, sending it under Ratzenberger's car. His car failed to turn into the Villeneuve Corner and struck the outside wall at 195.68 mph (314.9 km/h).
I remember at the time seeing pictures of a weird ( to me in any case ) front suspension design by Wirth . Does anybody have knowledge/piccies of this ?richard_leeds wrote:Roland's death was caused by his front wing breaking off. Nick Wirth was designer, owner and team principal for that team. It was unnerving that there was another front wing failure when Wirth returned as team principal in 2010 for Virgin.
Back to OP, yes Simtek was one of the last small indie teams that relied on passion and clever thinking to fight with the much bigger teams.