And you're not?munudeges wrote:You're speculating wildly.
The alteration of aerodynamics should shift the downforce balance towards the front. As for "underside doing the steering" I'm not quite sure what you mean. First off it suggests that the rear suspension is not able to hold the car. That is another problem with "bottoming theory" -- if the car bottomed and lost its downforce the rear suspension should've rebound, it could've destabilize the car and send it to a spin but understeering means that the car was travelling with little yaw angle. A car travelling on a straight line bottoming should not present much a problem. There is a possibility that the car's pitch was altered in such way that underside actually started to create lift, but given that Senna was able to decelerate it is unlikely.munudeges wrote:It's not clearcut at all that oversteer would be promoted because if, as seems pretty clear from visual footage of the car, the car bottomed completely then you've got a loss of underside and diffuser downforce (that alters the aerodynamic profile of the car completely) coupled with the car underside doing the steering as I'd said above.
But the laws of physics should apply anyway.munudeges wrote: That is not exactly a normal set of circumstances. The behaviour of that car as soon as it started the race was completely abnormal.
No it shouldn't. Pure speculative nonsense. With a car set at a lower ride height there is less space for the suspension to do its work. This is just so silly it isn't even funny. You've got a tremendous amount of force and momentum at play at 190mph through a corner and you're not going to get a car that ' should react to driver's inputs'. At a medium or slower speed corner maybe Senna could snap the car out of it, and maybe he already did, but the forces are simply too great at 190mph.That is another problem with "bottoming theory" -- if the car bottomed and lost its downforce the rear suspension should've rebound
You know exactly what I mean and if you don't I suggest you re-read this thread....again. If not then I suggest you perform some experiments.As for "underside doing the steering" I'm not quite sure what you mean.
Really? So tell me, what suspension is doing?munudeges wrote:No it shouldn't. Pure speculative nonsense. With a car set at a lower ride height there is less space for the suspension to do its work. This is just so silly it isn't even funny.
No, it's you saying the "underside doing steering", so it's up to you to show experiments that prove something.munudeges wrote:You know exactly what I mean and if you don't I suggest you re-read this thread....again. If not then I suggest you perform some experiments.
The downforce is proportional to the square of the speed but so is centrifugal force. They counteract each other. There's no such thing as "minimum corner speed".munudeges wrote:Someone who doesn't know that there is a speed window that an aerodynamically drive car has to be driven to maintain its grip (go slower and you have less grip) has a fundamental lack of understanding (and let go of the emotional attachment of whose fault it was) that needs to be bridged before this can go any further.
Good time to mention that Senna was wearing an illegal, lightweight helmet.maranello55 wrote:i think the video showed it quite clearly that the steering is displaced. But I remembered a documentray of David Coulthard explaning it dat its normal.
But i think wuteva the reason is, it is the lateral impact on a concrete wall that killed him. Theres NO WAY anyone wudve survived that. The weight of the helmet alone is enuff force to snap ur neck in an impact.
typically for motor racing accidents the lighter the helmet the less likely is a fatal basal skull fractureGitanesBlondes wrote:Good time to mention that Senna was wearing an illegal, lightweight helmet.maranello55 wrote:i think the video showed it quite clearly that the steering is displaced. But I remembered a documentray of David Coulthard explaning it dat its normal.
But i think wuteva the reason is, it is the lateral impact on a concrete wall that killed him. Theres NO WAY anyone wudve survived that. The weight of the helmet alone is enuff force to snap ur neck in an impact.
HANS was probably the greatest advance ever made with regards to safety. It just took awhile for the whole thing to catch on sadly as there were quite a few more preventable deaths in racing after then.Tommy Cookers wrote:typically for motor racing accidents the lighter the helmet the less likely is a fatal basal skull fractureGitanesBlondes wrote:Good time to mention that Senna was wearing an illegal, lightweight helmet.maranello55 wrote:i think the video showed it quite clearly that the steering is displaced. But I remembered a documentray of David Coulthard explaning it dat its normal.
But i think wuteva the reason is, it is the lateral impact on a concrete wall that killed him. Theres NO WAY anyone wudve survived that. The weight of the helmet alone is enuff force to snap ur neck in an impact.
some drivers would have survived if they had not worn helmets
that's why the HANS is now mandatory
Sure it was an important moment in the history of F1, certainly from a safety perspective. But I feel like the "why" of the incident is irrelevant at this point.GitanesBlondes wrote:Jersey Tom-
While it may be of little importance to discuss to you since it makes "little difference", I disagree with you on that notion.
It was the most seminal event in F1 history as that, more than any prior event shaped the entire future of the sport for better or worse. In spite of all of the prior deaths in years past, not a single one altered the direction of F1 as much as the death of Senna did. That is why in spite of arguments put forth, the arguments continue now almost 20 years after we last saw Senna racing.
If he either walks away from the wreck of the Williams-Renault, or simply never goes off the circuit that day, I can absolutely guarantee you that the sport we watch in 2013 looks entirely different from the sport we actually watch currently. The outward ripples of what happened on May 1st, 1994 are so immense, that to try and pinpoint the effect on every single aspect is near impossible.
That being said, I do think it is worth --no matter how little difference it makes on the outcome of those events-- to try and pinpoint the events that happened over the span of 2 seconds due to what the historical impact was. I also happen to be deeply fascinated with fatal auto racing accidents, which is why I like to discuss them with people. For as gruesome and uncomfortable as they make people with their sudden finality, the things to be learned from them are interesting. I also use them to chart the progress of racing as a whole.
More than 3 actually. If you count incident that caused driver to miss the GP as major there were at least 8. A horror year by any account.richard_leeds wrote:All I do know for certain is that the 3 major accidents resulting in 2 fatalities were the result of a storm that was brewing for a couple of years. Those 3 accidents highlighted a common root cause, and common unsafe consequences. It just happened that Senna was one of those caught up in it.