The wall vs penalty discussion is interesting, but I think it's absolutely wrong to say that "Everyone who say that they want a wall, really want any driver who leaves the track to be out of the race ".Stradivarius wrote:I agree, which is why I earlier stated that the talk about walls is nonsense. Everyone who say that they want a wall, really want any driver who leaves the track to be out of the race and this can be achieved by simply enforcing the rule of Article 27.4 in the sporting regulations. An immediate drive-through would probably be enough of an incentive to keep the drivers on the track and then exceptions can be made in those cases where the driver is clearly not at fault.bhall II wrote:Competitively, there's no difference between the result of striking a wall and the result of a rule that would disqualify drivers for off-track excursions. No one argues with walls about the non-negotiable consequences they impose. Why should the rules be any different?
In my subjective opinion, black flagging a driver for transgressing track limits is the most contrived cop-out I can think of. Motorsport is an activity that takes place in the midst of the physical world. The result should be dictated by driver input, the vehicle's response (F=ma) and that's it. Every time you start adding 'administrative sanctions' like time penalties for sporting transgressions you are moving the sport away from the laws of physics and towards a contrived 'result by committee' type activity.
Think for a moment of all the administrative gotchas of black flagging a driver for track limits. What if he was pushed out by another car? Do you take into account who was at fault for that previous incident before ruling on the track limits? What if a driver was avoiding debris? What if the driver claims he had a vehicle malfunction? What if the driver claims he was letting by lapped traffic? Are you going to penalise drivers in these cases or are you going to write up the necessary 10-20 extra rules detailing all the exceptions?
Motorsport, like any sport, is just a form of entertainment and nothing else. It isn't the United Nations commission on human rights so introducing even more rules which need to be decided by committees which in turn create loopholes (listed above) which need to be closed by even more rules is a step in the fundamentally wrong direction.
There is a reason why, as it is now (or was until a couple of months ago), the drivers agreed upfront with race direction which corners will be monitored for track limits and which ones won't. In many places leaving the track is absolutely no advantage at all and being forced to park a perfectly intact racecar because of one of these absolutely inconsequential track limits transgression has no sense from a logical point of view and is a huge anti-climax from a spectacle point of view. As dumb as everyone think the FIA are - they obviously saw this and dealt with it.
A wall completely removes any aspect of the sporting regulations, stewarding and general bureaucracy from the situation. Leave the track and the only laws you need to deal with are the laws of physics (which make non-negotiable real-time decisions without a committee). It throws out a load of bureaucracy and reintroduces the physical element of the sport.
I imagine that anyone who is against walls from a safety point of view should also be contrary to continuing to race on tracks such as Monaco, Suzuka, Spa, Brazil, Silverstone, Montreal all of which have had significant accidents against immovable walls in the last couple of years:
Anyway, if you implement a sliding wall like I've proposed above, it can potentially be even safer than tarmac runoffs if it's done right.
EDIT: The image link for my diagram didn't work on the previous page so I've put it here again: