Sure, here's my opinion.West wrote:Now I'm thinking about another topic: who's to blame for Indianapolis, which obviously there will be a lot of sources to be found.
1) Michelin
2) The FIA
3) The Teams
4) Ferrari
5) IMS
We don't need a discussion here about who's to blame but I put this question, to fellow engineers (and whoever else), if this makes for a good term paper or presentation. This class is supposed to be an engineering writing class.
You're an engineer or soon to be one, why don't you concentrate on the things that matter engineering wise.
There's always going to be politics in your engineering career, if you can't look past them now, then you may as well not bother and you can just be like the rest of the people that waste time and discuss the same thing and argue in circles - much like this thread in some places. It's quite useless really, indentify the facts, and work on them, let the whatever governing body worry about decisions, if you're in a technical position then your job is such, if it's management, then I guess you'll have more pull with the politics.
This thread was created to get a sense of what technically went wrong. Sometimes there are people on this forum that have inside info (scrutineers etc..) so I was hoping to see what they had to say about why it falied, especially since now we know it was a design flaw due to lack of testing (but then again, isn't every engineer failure?)
So I would propose doing a paper on Tires. Racecar Engineering mag has some very interresting articles. Plus you have the 'debacle' of the USGP, you have Kimi's front suspension collapse due to a tire issue, you have Schumi's tire incidents ... all from this year.
You can then look at the different types of tires, you can look at the possibility of slicks in the future, you can look at the advantages and disadvantages of having a tire manufacturer with over 50% of the teams vs. the other one.
Stay with the technical issues and let the media worry about the politics.
I'm always going to watch F1 I really don't care what happens. This year I picked up a subscription to racecar eng. mag and it's been well worth it. Especially things such as previews of technology or concepts that are in the works ... and then seeing them various pieces 'tested' on race day, and then sometimes in a later issue and analysis, I quite like it, it's a different view into being a racing aficianado.
Whatever you do, best of luck and keep us posted on the paper
cheers and beers !