SatchelCharge wrote:...how are you still ignoring the fact that the front wheels quite clearly straighten up even though the steering wheel is still turned left?
There is a simple reason for this and that is the underside of the car was doing the steering. If anyone actually did any reading in this thread they would have picked that up.
The car experiences oversteer in the middle of the corner which Senna then corrects as he should. There really isn't any reason why the car should be that unstable in that corner. It should be perfectly smooth, so that should tell you something. The steering certainly worked perfectly there but around a tenth or so later when he'd done that something happened to the car. At that precise moment, if you see the onboard footage from Schumacher behind, there is a shower of sparks as the car goes straight on. It's almost as if the car has collapsed on to the track surface.
Under those circumstances you've got the car underside right on the track surface effectively aquaplaning on it. With the forces involved you're faced with a situation where the driver can turn left and pull as hard on the wheel as he likes but the car and the wheels will not turn. You factor in the loss of downforce on top of that and you have a car that was never going to turn left. When you think about it it's pretty easy to understand. I really wouldn't be surprised if there was a huge amount of flex on the steering wheel because Senna would have been pulling on it as hard as possible.