Exactly what i was thinking about. reducing the number of mechanics will only reduce the number of injuries and not the likelihood of it happening.beelsebob wrote:What makes you think fewer mechanics makes an accident less likely? Sure, you reduce the number of injured in an accident, but you don't make them less likely, which is really where the target would be to improve safety.Diesel wrote:Unfortunately I think at the rate accidents are occuring, rules will end up being put in place when a mechanic gets crippled. I would much rather see something changed before that happens.
I witnessed the Sauber pitstop first hand, it wasn't pleasant.
I've been thinking the same.bhallg2k wrote:I seriously do not understand how F1 has so many fans when so many people want to strip the F1 from F1.
Cam wrote:It is nice to see other categories and see what they do. V8 Supercars do a nice job. One guy only for each wheel, one guy fuels, one guy runs the jack (I don't think you need a guy a guy at the front, tech could replace him). You'll see that they double up on their roles to make adjustments, check the car etc. It does seem more efficient and I'm sure they feel the pressure to perform multi-roles.
In these cases, you remind those people of the plethora of other racing series around the world that they might find more to their liking.Cam wrote:[...]
In a perfect world, the current pit stopping solution is great, I love it. Awesome to see a perfect dance of coordination of people and tools to despatch a car in a few seconds, however, as has been thrown in my face continually, the vast majority of people don't think that these kind of F1 traits should remain (and you know all the traits I'm talking about from the other threads), so how is pit stops any different.
[...]
There's a certain FUD that comes out of FOM, F1, and the FIA regarding costs involved in F1.Cam wrote:I understand your confusion bhall2gk. I'm trying to find middle ground. My hard stance for F1 remaining supreme was cut down from all angles in other threads, so I'm trying to keep an open mind and offer up positive solutions, even if I don't fully agree with them.
In a perfect world, the current pit stopping solution is great, I love it. Awesome to see a perfect dance of coordination of people and tools to despatch a car in a few seconds, however, as has been thrown in my face continually, the vast majority of people don't think that these kind of F1 traits should remain (and you know all the traits I'm talking about from the other threads), so how is pit stops any different.
Rather than throw my hands up in the air and walk away, I'm trying to see both sides and offer up possible remedies that may have some merit. It does not mean that my fundamental wish and desire for F1 has changed and I'm a bit surprised you, of all people, would think that.
If reducing the number of people in pit stops helps F1 stay afloat, then I'm okay with that - for me it's more about the driver, car and development anyway. Sometimes we all have to 'take one for the team'.
bhall2gk, this is a thread discussing 'should' the number of mechanics be limited. You simply can't poo poo every negative answer that gets added. We all know you're a F1 'purist', more so than probably anyone else here, but we still should be able to suggest solutions or concepts without being harassed and vilified simply because it does not meet your reasoning of F1.bhallg2k wrote:In these cases, you remind those people of the plethora of other racing series around the world that they might find more to their liking.Cam wrote:[...]
In a perfect world, the current pit stopping solution is great, I love it. Awesome to see a perfect dance of coordination of people and tools to despatch a car in a few seconds, however, as has been thrown in my face continually, the vast majority of people don't think that these kind of F1 traits should remain (and you know all the traits I'm talking about from the other threads), so how is pit stops any different.
[...]
I don't like American football. But, I might if some parts of it were different. Is it fair for me to demand those changes in spite of everyone who does like American football just the way it is?