I, for one, am tired of your never-ending posts!Just_a_fan wrote:
Anyway, enough of my rambling...
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But, seriously, I think a mass-damping idea would be useful for the more open tracks like Abu Dhabi whose runoff areas seem to go on forever.
I, for one, am tired of your never-ending posts!Just_a_fan wrote:
Anyway, enough of my rambling...
When you were young, did you ever climb on top of your house roof? I did. And when I almost fell I got such a fright, a massive surge of adrenalin. Do you know that feeling? It's like an instant hollow in your gut when it all goes wrong, only to quickly disappear when you realise it's all okay and you feel great. It was a euphoric feeling. That experience lead me to climb trees, jump bikes and all sorts of crazy things - which usually ended up with me hurting myself, breaking bones etc.timbo wrote:Please tell, what exactly did safety rules water down.Cam wrote:Make the drivers cell as safe as you can and leave the rest. I'd rather worship a hero that risked it all than someone who conquered in a cotton wool jacket with watered down 'safety first' rules. What's to aspire too there? They're big boys, let them play.
Only for people who don't know enough. Guess what, I play videogames, and I get a feeling of how HARD it is to get consistent lap times at THAT level even without physical stress.strad wrote:The image now is that it's like some video game. All clean and nice for the cameras. And that the cars are so secure that not only would you do it but you let your mom do it like some kind of fair ride.
Actually, that's recipe which Tilke favors.We need long straights followed by corners where you can gain position by out braking your opponent
Not sure it'll really help. Well, it probably would, but to what extent? If the drivers will have longer braking distances, there would be bigger margin for error, so even less mistakes. And how that is about risk?we get rid of carbon brakes
Was at India last year.oh yeah, and kerbs you can bend a wheel on or deflate a tire.
Well, you propose something which we can discuss, which is nice.Thanks for listening even though I know you mostly won't agree.
You think F1 drivers are adrenalin junkies?Cam wrote:People who chose high risk endeavours do so for a reason, they love it.
I agree. But it is natural product of evolution (with Ferrari/Schuey leading the way with unprecedented reliability). And most evolutionary theories state that there's no backwards evolution.richard_leeds wrote:Put it another way, isn't the sport too sanitised when every car finishes?
I disagree. Marco Simoncellis crash in MotoGP last year hasn't stopped the sport of motorbike racing, hasn't stopped the tv broadcasts or caused any major players to stop racing and from what I can tell, hasn't caused any major sponsors to leave. People still tune in to watch the races. I watched it live on tv and was horrified at what I saw. I still watch the races though. MMA has had a reported 7 deaths, yet the sport continues to grow in popularity. It's one of the most brutal and bloody sports seen since roman times - so why do so many people tune in to watch?Stradivarius wrote:And of course, as formula 1 is broadcasted worldwide to millions of people, one should also think about what is considered acceptable to show on TV. Showing people die on live TV is clearly not something which is considered acceptable among the majority of the viewers.
Explain to me what you like about that sound more, than you do about the current screaming engines? Maybe I'll hear what the deal is about thenstrad wrote:Well jdlive, You are most certainly entitled to your opinion but there a millions that disagree with you and honestly...I'm one of them.
Increasing speed of the cars while making everything else safer is what I'd like to see done as well. I want to see 400 KPH through Eau Rouge like the Red Bull X1 did, but in an F1 preferably.bhallg2k wrote:This broad topic of conversation weaves in and out of many smaller topics that have very little to do with safety or risk in and of themselves. The idea that increased risk somehow "increases racing" is nonsensical, because, on its own, it implies something along the lines of one or two corners of a circuit being subjected to random artillery barrages during the course of a grand prix - actually, I quite like that idea.
I think those who question modern safety standards and F1's risk-averse culture do so not merely because they wish to see increased risk to life and limb in F1, but to see speeds increased and to see an increase in the competitive penalties for exceeding the limits of the machine and/or the circuit. Formula One is going backwards as far as speeds go, and there's very little reason for drivers at many tracks to avoid going off-track, because there's virtually no penalty for doing so.
I want to see the cars go faster. I want to see bigger penalties for going off-track. By its very nature, those desires inherently call for increased risk. But, I'm not asking for increased risk just for the sake of increased risk - unless they do the artillery thing.
If the survival cells have to be beefed up to make increased speeds a reality, fine. If run-off areas have to be altered to increase penalties for using them, that's fine, too. Ideally, I'd like to see the burden of risk carried solely on the shoulders of the car. That way if a driver goes beyond the limits, only the car suffers the consequences; the driver walks away.
That, combined with higher visual speed there, is definitely the reason it is my favorite GP to watchstrad wrote:I would put forth that the reason Monaco remains so popular is there is a more tangible sense of inherent risk.