GitanesBlondes wrote:It doesn't prove anything.
The steering wheel moved quite a bit in the FW-16. Sure it might not look normal compared to other cars, but it was most assuredly normal for that car no matter how unsettling it looked.
Ride height was everything.
Just wondering if you actually have any technical reasoning to backup your claim. Because you are doing a lot of talking but not really saying anything with any substance.
The way I see it is there is evidence supporting both theories. I think there is a good possibility that the ride height caused a snap oversteer, and when I watch the onboard I sense a momentary increase in yawrate (noticed by looking at the trajectory of track boundary) just before the video cuts out. Its also clear the car is heavily bottoming out on the previous lap.
At the same time, the external video shows the car leaving the track going practically straight, no tyre smoke, no detectable change in yaw angle. This suggests the steering failed. Additional to that, my opinion on the video with Coulthard demonstrating the flex in the steering column is that its complete BS. No column on a racecar will ever flex that much. Certainly no car I have worked with flexed like that. Steering compliance of any type is a massive no no in a racecar design and its actually quite easy to design out lateral flex like that.
So yea, that's my reasoning. I'm all ears to hear your logic.
T