Sports cars have wipers, of course.
So using a wiper for clearing an oil smudge works for you?
We were talking about driving in the rain. Sports cars drive in the rain and they use wipers. Those are just statements of fact.
It doesn't seem like IndyCar is as hyper focused on the danger of flying wheels as the FIA is. Surtees is the only driver I can find that was killed by a stray wheel. More people get hit with smaller pieces of debris and they can be just as deadly e.g. Massa's incident. The spring came at him off-center and hit the side of his helmet so the halo would not have helped him there.
This is going to be a problem with any solution. The amount of room a driver has to egress is inversely proportional to the amount of coverage the screen/halo provides.
The optical quality on that screen is very impressive!
Interestingly, one of the 1st instances of the HUD in service - was the method used in the WW II
oh wowzers, thats some impressive video footage and some amazing insight in the view.
yeah that really surprised me too.
rainy enough?NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Feb 2018, 23:57...
I think Rain may be a problem in F1, where as they dont run in the rain in the states on ovals, and i cant actually remember seeing any indycar in the rain on a road course. Do they run in the rain at all? ...
Correction, halo is designed for a single freak scenario that has killed a single driver in half a century, the Indy screen is designed to protect drivers from scenarios that have injured or killed 10's of drivers over the same period!